Chapter 4 - Multiple Choice
Chapter 4 - Multiple Choice
Chapter 4 - Multiple Choice
2. Stressors are:
A) demanding events or situations that trigger coping adjustments in a person.
B) unpleasant environmental stimuli.
C) environmental stimuli that a person has never before experienced.
D) events that cause heart rate and blood pressure to increase.
3. The correlation between scores on the Social Readjustment Rating Scale and
measures of illness has generally been found to be:
A) very strong and positive.
B) very strong and negative.
C) relatively weak.
D) stronger for women than for men.
4. The Social Readjustment Rating Scale has been criticized for all the following
reasons EXCEPT:
A) It consists of vague items open to subjective interpretation.
B) It fails to take into consideration individual differences in the way events are
appraised.
C) It does not differentiate between resolved and unresolved stressful events.
D) Separating positive and negative events.
5. The effects of stress are most deleterious when the stressor is:
A) negative.
B) intense.
C) anticipated.
D) unpredictable.
6. Following the worst nuclear accident in the United States there was a marked
increase in:
A) levels of cortisol, epinephrine, and norepinephrine.
B) divorce.
C) depression.
D) death.
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7. Residents living near the Three Mile Island nuclear plant at the time of the
accident:
A) were more likely to suffer from hypertension during the year following the
accident.
B) fared better if they used emotion-focused coping.
C) showed only short-term increases in stress levels.
D) fared better if they were able to avoid thinking about their exposure to radiation.
9. Critics of research surveys of the impact of daily hassles argue that some of the
items listed as hassles are:
A) impossible to measure.
B) unsurprising and predictable.
C) actually symptoms of stress.
D) rarely experienced.
10. A dramatic illustration of the interaction of daily hassles with chronic stress is the
decrease in ____________ that occurred in Russian men just after the breakup of
the former Soviet Union.
A) marriage rates
B) life expectancy
C) testosterone levels
D) civility
11. According to research studies of children living near airports, exposure to chronic
loud noise may result in:
A) lower systolic and diastolic blood pressure levels.
B) lower levels of cortisol and other stress hormones.
C) reading problems.
D) learned helplessness.
12. Glass and Singer found that college students appraised a loud, distracting noise
as less stressful when it was:
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A) unexpected.
B) expected.
C) uncontrollable.
D) controllable
13. Which of the following is not necessarily true regarding population density,
crowding, and behavior?
A) Crowding is associated with increases in aggression in laboratory rats.
B) Crowding increases unwanted social interactions.
C) Density always produces crowding.
D) Density is a measure of crowding.
14. The psychological state in which people believe they do not have enough space
to function as they wish is called:
A) density.
B) crowding.
C) allostasis.
D) burnout.
15. Calhoun's research studies with rats living under highly crowded conditions
found that crowding eventually led to all of the following EXCEPT:
A) fighting as rats tried to defend their territories.
B) decreased infant mortality.
C) acts of deviancy, including cannibalism.
D) reduced sexual receptivity among females.
16. Crowding, noise, pollution, discrimination, and other stressors often occur
together in what has been called the:
A) environment of poverty.
B) behavioral sink.
C) urban desert.
D) urban jungle.
17. In many parts of the world, the nature of work has changed from:
A) farming to manufacturing to knowledge work.
B) hunting to farming to manufacturing.
C) farming to knowledge work to service work.
D) manufacturing to service work to knowledge work.
18. Between ages 18 and 27, the average worker in the United States holds _______
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job(s).
A) one
B) three
C) five
D) eight
19. Which of the following is NOT one of the personality and work environment
types identified by John Holland?
A) Realistic
B) Investigative
C) Enterprising
D) Unconventional
21. Ron is so afraid that his job performance will be evaluated negatively that he
feels considerable stress driving to work each day. Ron's fear is an example of:
A) learned helplessness.
B) social-evaluative threat.
C) employee disengagement.
D) stereotype threat.
22. Scarcity and enhancement are two competing hypotheses regarding women and:
A) burnout.
B) role overload.
C) acculturation stress.
D) cognitive appraisal.
23. Regarding the question of whether having a job as well as a home and family
enhances or threatens a woman's health, researchers have generally found that:
A) both women and men who balance vocational, marital, and parental roles generally
are healthier and happier than adults who function in only one or two of these roles.
B) women (but not men) who attempt to balance vocational, marital, and parental
roles have more health complaints than their counterparts who function in only one
or two of these roles.
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C) both women and men who attempt to balance vocational, marital, and parental
roles have more health complaints than their counterparts who function in only one
or two of these roles.
D) it is impossible to predict who will have more complaints.
24. Research studies of role overload in women have generally concluded that what
matters most is:
A) the number of roles a woman occupies.
B) the quality of a working woman's experience in her various roles.
C) the extent of each woman's social support network.
D) None of these matter.
26. Desynchronized biological rhythms, headaches, and sleep disturbances are often
associated with:
A) role ambiguity.
B) job loss.
C) inadequate career advancement.
D) shiftwork.
27. During the last half century, the average household income of Americans has
_____________ and their self-reported personal happiness has
_______________.
A) remained almost unchanged; decreased
B) increased; remained almost unchanged
C) remained almost unchanged; increased
D) remained almost unchanged; remained almost unchanged.
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29. Caregiving has been associated with:
A) overproduction of proinflammatory cytokines.
B) higher percentages of T cells.
C) underproduction of proinflammatory cytokines.
D) a stronger immune response.
30. The medical researcher who first used the term stress, believing it to be a
common cause of medical problems, was:
A) Hans Selye.
B) Richard Lazarus.
C) Walter Cannon.
D) Martin Seligman.
34. Running like a rope through the middle of the brainstem, the _______________
plays a central role in alerting the brain to an impending threat or challenge.
A) hypothalamus
B) thalamus
C) limbic system
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D) reticular formation
36. In response to a potential stressor that has been perceived by the sense organs, the
_______________ alerts the brain to an impending threat or challenge.
A) hypothalamus
B) reticular formation
C) pituitary gland
D) occipital lobe
40. Which of the following structures is not involved in the HPA system?
A) adrenal cortex
B) hypothalamus
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C) pituitary gland
D) adrenal medulla
41. Unrelenting stress can damage the ______________, causing levels of the
hormone ___________ to spiral upward.
A) amygdala; dopamine
B) pituitary gland; ACTH
C) adrenal cortex; epinephrine
D) hippocampus; cortisol
43. Josh is a participant in a study in which prompts from his smart phone require
him to report on his mood, social interactions, and other variables throughout the
day. Evidently, Josh's study is making use of the procedure called:
A) 360-degree feedback.
B) ecological momentary assessment.
C) noncontingent signal recording.
D) objective-structured examination.
44. In Ader and Cohen's taste-aversion experiment with rats, the sweet-tasting water
functioned as a(n) _______________, and the drug it was paired with functioned
as a(n) _______________.
A) conditioned stimulus; unconditioned stimulus
B) unconditioned stimulus; conditioned stimulus
C) precipitating factor; predisposing factor
D) predisposing factor; precipitating factor
45. Protein molecules produced by immune cells that can bind to receptor sites on
brain cells and trigger nerve impulses are called:
A) neurotransmitters.
B) erythrocytes.
C) leukocytes.
D) cytokines.
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46. Ader and Cohen's research was instrumental in the development of the new field
of biomedical research known as:
A) allopathic medicine.
B) behavioral medicine.
C) pharmacokinetics.
D) psychoneuroimmunology.
48. Divorce, bereavement, unemployment and exam periods are often accompanied
by:
A) immunosuppression.
B) an increase in T cells.
C) an increase in natural killer cells.
D) an increase in the total number of lymphocytes.
49. In one study, researchers found that patients who reported higher levels of
preoperative stress before undergoing hernia surgery had:
A) lower serum corticosteroid levels.
B) slower rates of wound healing.
C) less painful recovery periods.
D) less inflammation.
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52. Allostatic load refers to:
A) any event or situation that triggers coping adjustments.
B) the process by which we perceive and respond to threatening events.
C) the cumulative long-term effects of the body's physiological response.
D) the body's initial, rapid-acting response to stress.
55. Who first suggested that stress is a nonspecific response of the body?
A) Richard Lazarus
B) Hans Selye
C) Martin Seligman
D) Walter Cannon
56. In order, the three phases of the general adaptation syndrome are:
A) resistance, alarm, exhaustion.
B) alarm, exhaustion, resistance.
C) exhaustion, alarm, resistance.
D) alarm, resistance, exhaustion.
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58. In one study, laboratory rats that were chronically stressed suffered significant
atrophying of neurons in the _______________, a brain area that plays a crucial
role in _______________.
A) hippocampus; memory
B) thalamus; mood
C) hypothalamus; motivation
D) occipital cortex; vision
60. Richard Lazarus and his colleagues view stress as primarily a consequence of:
A) environmental events.
B) the number of life change units in a person's daily life.
C) a disruption of homeostasis.
D) how a person appraises environmental events and the person's coping resources.
63. Which of the following is the best example of a person's use of primary appraisal
in reacting to a new job?
A) deciding whether one's skills are sufficient to perform the job
B) changing one's impressions of a job in light of new information
C) deciding whether the job enhances one's self-efficacy
D) determining whether one has the ability to cope with the stress of the job
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64. Secondary appraisal refers to:
A) a person's initial determination of an event's meaning.
B) a person's determination of whether his or her resources are sufficient to meet the
demands of a threatening event.
C) the process by which challenging events are constantly reevaluated.
D) All of these represent secondary appraisal.
68. Some individuals are more vulnerable to illness because their biological systems
respond more strongly to environmental triggers. These individuals show greater:
A) primary appraisal.
B) reactivity.
C) secondary appraisal.
D) reappraisal.
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70. Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) has been associated with:
A) temporary changes in the brain, involving the amygdala.
B) decreased cortisol, norepinephrine, and epinephrine.
C) biochemical and hormonal alterations that last over a long period.
D) temporary hormonal changes.
71. Regarding post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which of the following is NOT
true?
A) Individuals who develop PTSD are also more vulnerable to other psychological
disorders.
B) People who feel a lack of social support are more likely to develop symptoms of
PTSD.
C) Female soldiers who experience harassment or sexual assault report higher-than-
average symptoms of PTSD.
D) Most combat-stress veterans eventually develop symptoms of PTSD.
72. A year after her combat duty in the war in Iraq, Sheila began having nightmares
and unwanted flashbacks about her traumatic experience. Sheila would probably
be diagnosed as suffering from:
A) hypochondriasis.
B) post-traumatic stress disorder.
C) bipolar disorder.
D) burnout.
73. Shelley Taylor has proposed that females are more likely than males to respond
to the same stressors with:
A) fight-or-flight.
B) arousal of the sympathetic nervous system.
C) arousal of the parasympathetic nervous system.
D) tend-and-befriend behaviors.
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C) cortisol.
D) GSA.
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Answer Key
1. C
2. C
3. C
4. D
5. D
6. A
7. A
8. A
9. C
10. B
11. C
12. D
13. C
14. B
15. B
16. A
17. A
18. D
19. D
20. A
21. B
22. B
23. A
24. B
25. C
26. D
27. B
28. B
29. A
30. C
31. B
32. C
33. D
34. D
35. C
36. A
37. B
38. B
39. C
40. A
41. D
42. A
43. B
44. A
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45. D
46. D
47. C
48. A
49. B
50. A
51. B
52. C
53. D
54. B
55. B
56. D
57. C
58. C
59. D
60. D
61. B
62. C
63. A
64. B
65. C
66. C
67. D
68. B
69. C
70. C
71. D
72. B
73. D
74. B
75. B
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