Chapter 8: Problem 7
Problems that require a common object to be used in an unusual way may be difficult to solve because of: A. mental set. B. irrelevant information. C. unnecessary constraints. D. functional fixedness.
Chapter 8: Problem 7
Problems that require a common object to be used in an unusual way may be difficult to solve because of: A. mental set. B. irrelevant information. C. unnecessary constraints. D. functional fixedness.
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Get started for freeIf someone says, "Only a congenital pinhead would make that choice," this use of language would represent: A. confirmation bias. B. syntactic slanting. C. anticipatory name calling. D. telegraphic speech.
The linguistic relativity hypothesis is the notion that: A. one's language determines the nature of one's thought. B. one's thought determines the nature of one's language. C. language and thought are separate and independent processes. D. language and thought interact, with each influencing the other.
In solving problems, people who are field dependent: A. rely on external frames of reference. B. tend to accept the physical environment as a given. C. tend to focus on specific features of a problem. D. tend to do all of the above. E. do both a and b.
When you estimate the probability of an event by judging the ease with which relevant instances come to mind, you are relying on: A. an additive decision-making model. B. the representativeness heuristic. C. the availability heuristic. D. a noncompensatory model
The nine-dot problem is: A. often solved suddenly with a burst of insight. B. difficult because people assume constraints that are not part of the problem. C. solved through fast mapping. D. both a and b.
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