The Personality Puzzle 7th Edition By David C. Funder - Test Bank

The Personality Puzzle 7th Edition By David C. Funder - Test Bank   Instant Download - Complete Test Bank With Answers     Sample Questions Are Posted Below   Chapter 05: Personality Judgment   MULTIPLE CHOICE   The judgments other people make of your personality may affect ________. a. your opportunities c. expectancies of your …

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The Personality Puzzle 7th Edition By David C. Funder – Test Bank

 

Instant Download – Complete Test Bank With Answers

 

 

Sample Questions Are Posted Below

 

Chapter 05: Personality Judgment

 

MULTIPLE CHOICE

 

  1. The judgments other people make of your personality may affect ________.
a. your opportunities c. expectancies of your behavior
b. your chances of getting a job d. all of the above

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality         OBJ:   5.1

MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Judgments other people make of your personality are known as your ________.
a. reputation c. realistic accuracy model signal
b. self-concept d. identity

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality         OBJ:   5.1

MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Judgments of your personality by others ________.
a. reflect who you are
b. create who you are
c. are too inaccurate to be used in research contexts
d. both reflect who you are and can influence what you are like

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality         OBJ:   5.1

MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Shy people fear social interactions and often feel lonely. They are typically perceived by others as ________.
a. shy c. warm and friendly
b. cold and aloof d. sensitive and intelligent

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Opportunities

OBJ:   5.1                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. About 1 person in ________ considers himself or herself to be chronically shy.
a. 100 c. 10
b. 25 d. 4

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Opportunities

OBJ:   5.1                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. Self-fulfilling prophecies are more technically known as ________.
a. opportunistic fallacies c. consequential reputations
b. expectancy effects d. recency effects

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Expectancies

OBJ:   5.2                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. Which of the following is NOT considered one of the likely reasons that high-expectancy students perform better?
a. Teachers are warmer to these students.
b. Teachers provide more detailed and constructive feedback to these students.
c. Teachers show an increased willingness to ignore disciplinary problems in these students.
d. Teachers provide extra opportunities to these students.

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Expectancies

OBJ:   5.2                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. In a study of social expectancies, Snyder, Tanke, and Berscheid (1977) found that if male participants were shown a photograph of an attractive woman and told they would be interacting with her by telephone, the female participant they actually spoke with ________.
a. rated herself as more attractive than the woman in the photograph
b. rated herself as less attractive than the woman in the photograph
c. was rated by other people as behaving in a warm, humorous, and friendly manner
d. was rated by other people as behaving in a cold, aloof, and unfriendly manner

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Expectancies

OBJ:   5.2                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. Attractive females are expected to be warm and friendly, and those females who are considered to be attractive are treated in such a manner that they indeed respond in warm and friendly ways. According to Snyder, Tanke, and Berscheid (1977), this effect is a type of ________.
a. self-fulfilling prophecy c. sex discrimination
b. accuracy moderator d. judgability phenomena

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Expectancies

OBJ:   5.2                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. In a series of studies about intellectual expectancies, Rosenthal and Jacobson (1968) found that schoolchildren randomly identified as “bloomers” showed an average IQ increase of about 15 points by the end of the school year. These studies demonstrated ________.
a. the power of expectancies
b. that formal training designed to develop self-efficacy can impact performance
c. the accuracy of lay judgments of personality
d. the good target moderator of accuracy

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Expectancies

OBJ:   5.2                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. According to Lee Jussim (1991), the source of real-life expectancies is likely ________.
a. erroneous stereotypes about groups
b. previous observations of behavioral tendencies
c. authoritarian personality traits
d. a cognitive bias to seek incongruent information

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Expectancies

OBJ:   5.2                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Research on intellectual and social expectancies demonstrates that ________.
a. other people’s perceptions of your personality can influence who you are and what you do
b. other people’s perceptions of your personality have little influence on your expectations
c. such judgments are always based on direct observation of behavior
d. such judgments are rarely unbiased

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Expectancies

OBJ:   5.2                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. What might be an effect of expectancies in real life?
a. to create new behavioral tendencies
b. to enhance reputations
c. to magnify or maintain existing behavioral tendencies
d. to diminish or punish existing behavioral tendencies

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Expectancies

OBJ:   5.2                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Julie does not like to attend parties because she is shy and convinced that people will not like her. When Julie does go to a party, she avoids eye contact, gives abrupt responses to other people’s questions, and quickly withdraws from interactions. As a result, she spends most of the evening in a corner by herself, convinced that no one at the party likes her. This is an example of ________.
a. the causal force of I data c. the effects of low self-monitoring
b. expectancy effects d. an internal locus of control

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   Consequences of Everyday Judgments of Personality: Expectancies

OBJ:   5.2                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. What are the two primary criteria for evaluating personality judgments?
a. interjudge agreement and internal consistency
b. internal consistency and behavioral prediction
c. interjudge agreement and behavioral prediction
d. predictive validity and behavioral prediction

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.3                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. The basic reason that research on the accuracy of personality judgments experienced a lengthy hiatus between 1955 and the mid-1980s was that ________.
a. early researchers had already identified the characteristics of a good judge of personality
b. researchers turned their attention to the content of personality judgments
c. researchers lacked consensual criteria for deciding the accuracy of personality judgments
d. early research indicated that personality judgments are relatively inconsequential

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate       REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.3                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. The observation “If it looks like a duck, walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, then it is probably a duck” illustrates the method of ________.
a. moderator variables c. procedural judgment
b. constructivist accuracy d. convergent validation

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Moderate       REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.3                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. Which of the following is assessed in the process of convergent validation?
a. interjudge agreement c. critical realism
b. constructivism d. first impressions

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.3                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Which of the following is an example of predictive validity in the context of accuracy judgments?
a. Your own ratings of your neuroticism correlate with your parents’ ratings.
b. Your friend’s ratings of your openness does not predict your timeliness.
c. Your own ratings of your agreeableness correlate with a clinician’s ratings.
d. Your parents’ ratings of your conscientiousness correlate with messiness of your room.

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Moderate       REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.3                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Which of the following is an example of interjudge agreement in the context of accuracy judgments?
a. Your own ratings of your conscientiousness predict your class attendance.
b. Your friends’ ratings of your agreeableness do not predict your neatness.
c. Your friends’ ratings of your extraversion converge with your parents’ ratings.
d. Your parents’ ratings of your neuroticism correlate with your anal retentiveness.

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate       REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.3                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Imagine that judgments of extraversion made on the first day of college correlate with the number of parties that students attend over the course of their four years of college. Researchers would therefore say that these judgments have ________.
a. interjudge agreement c. critical realism
b. internal consistency d. predictive validity

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Moderate       REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.3                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Which of the following illustrates converging criteria that could be used to establish the accuracy of a personality judgment?
a. One of your friends describes you as an extravert.
b. You always show up to work on time, and your colleagues say that you are dependable and conscientious.
c. You tend to get into arguments, and you throw tantrums frequently.
d. You describe yourself as intelligent, but you score low on an IQ test.

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.3                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. When Sam argues that all interpretations of reality are equally accurate, she is advocating the ________ philosophical position.
a. realist c. empiricist
b. positivist d. constructivist

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Moderate       REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.4                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. When Andrew argues some interpretations of reality are more correct than others, he is advocating the ________ philosophical position.
a. realist c. empiricist
b. positivist d. constructivist

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate       REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.4                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. The statement “There is no such thing as objective reality, only human ideas or perceptions of reality” would most likely be made by a ________. The statement “The absence of perfect, infallible criteria for truth does not force us to conclude that all interpretations of reality are equally likely to be correct” would most likely be made by a ________.
a. constructivist; empiricist c. critical realist; empiricist
b. constructivist; critical realist d. empiricist; critical realist

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate       REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.4                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. According to research described in the textbook, about how often did the more “competent” looking candidate win in the 2004 senate races?
a. 20 percent of the time c. 70 percent of the time
b. 50 percent of the time d. 100 percent of the time

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: First Impressions

OBJ:   5.5                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. What does recent research suggest about the validity of first impressions?
a. First impressions based on configural properties of faces may have some validity.
b. First impressions based on the size of the target’s nose have a surprising amount of validity.
c. First impressions based on the shape of the target’s mouth have a surprising amount of validity.
d. First impressions based on face judgments have no validity.

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: First Impressions: The Face

OBJ:   5.5                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. Based on recent research, what approach for job interviews might be the best?
a. written responses to open-ended questions
b. telephone interviews
c. face-to-face interviews
d. computer-mediated interviews

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: First Impressions: The Face

OBJ:   5.5                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Participants in a recent study were shown and then asked to judge composite faces from targets who scored extremely low or extremely high on personality dimensions. Which two traits had the highest levels of accuracy for both female and male targets?
a. extraversion and neuroticism c. agreeableness and neuroticism
b. extraversion and agreeableness d. neuroticism and openness

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: First Impressions: The Face

OBJ:   5.5                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Which was NOT one of the areas in which people made reasonably accurate judgments, based only on looking at someone’s face?
a. dominance vs. submissiveness
b. sexual orientation
c. profitability of a CEO’s company
d. number of children

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: First Impressions: The Face

OBJ:   5.5                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

  1. People who enjoy reflective, complex music tend to be higher in what trait?
a. cheerfulness c. imagination
b. talkativeness d. intelligence

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: First Impressions: Other Visible Signs of Personality

OBJ:   5.5                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. People who enjoy upbeat, conventional music tend to be higher in what trait?
a. cheerfulness c. imagination
b. talkativeness d. intelligence

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: First Impressions: Other Visible Signs of Personality

OBJ:   5.5                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Imagine your new roommate makes her bed carefully each morning. What might you infer with some accuracy about her personality?
a. She is conscientious. c. She is depressed.
b. She is open to experience. d. She is extremely extraverted.

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: First Impressions: Other Visible Signs of Personality

OBJ:   5.5                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. A variable that affects the relation between two other variables is known as a ________.
a. moderator c. transmitter
b. catalyst d. residual

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. Which of the following was NOT mentioned in the textbook as a potential moderator of accuracy?
a. qualities of personality judges
b. qualities of the target of the judgment
c. the amount of information available to judges
d. the age of the target of the judgment

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. A(n) ________ condition refers to a limit on the generalizability of a particular research conclusion.
a. threshold c. exclusionary
b. boundary d. caveat

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. According to the text, ________ describes a context where social norms tend to restrict what

people do.

a. a weak situation c. a strong situation
b. a socially constrained situation d. situationism

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. Andersen (1984) found that the quality of information affected the accuracy of personality judgments. According to the results of this study, information obtained from which actions would most likely lead to a social impression that corresponds to the target’s self-assessment?
a. listening to the target describe his or her overt behaviors
b. observing the person’s behaviors at work
c. watching a five-minute videotaped interaction between the target and an opposite-sex stranger
d. listening to the target describe his or her thoughts and feelings

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. Which of the following attributes were consistently related to being a good judge of personality in older research?
a. extraversion and openness
b. agreeableness and intelligence
c. conscientiousness and intelligence
d. extraversion and conscientiousness

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. Recent research on the good judge of personality indicated that the good judge was ________.
a. extraverted c. narcissistic
b. a high self-monitor d. agreeable

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. According to a recent study described in the textbook, which of the following is accurate about people who describe themselves as “a good judge of personality”?
a. Such people are much better than others at judging personality.
b. Such people are no more accurate than others at judging personality.
c. Such people are quite high in narcissism.
d. Such people are quite high in self-esteem.

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. According to the text, what trait refers to individual differences in the willingness to engage in sexual relations with minimal acquaintanceship?
a. sexual constraint c. socio-openness
b. sociosexuality d. sexual openness

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. According to evolutionary theory, humans should be able to judge the trait of ________ more accurately than other traits that are less important for the survival of the species.
a. social intelligence c. sociability
b. self-esteem d. sociosexuality

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. What was the boundary on the acquaintanceship effect identified by Colvin and Funder (1991)?
a. The advantage of close acquaintances vanishes when the criterion is the ability to predict behavior in a situation similar to one that strangers have seen but acquaintances have not.
b. Judgments made by acquaintances who have known the target for 5 years are as valid as judgments made by parents and acquaintances who have known the target for 20 years.
c. Strangers’ judgments are more accurate than acquaintances’ judgments when the criterion is self-other agreement.
d. Strangers’ judgments, based on a 5-minute videotape of the target’s behavior, demonstrated these judges’ ability to generalize to situations and contexts that were very different from the videotaped interactions.

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. According to the text, ________ does not seem to significantly improve as judges acquire more information, whereas ________ does seem to improve considerably.
a. accuracy; consensus c. predictive validity; reliability
b. consensus; accuracy d. consensus; interjudge agreement

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. How should you act in everyday life according to the “transparent self” theory of psychological health?
a. Act like a chameleon, changing from one situation to the next, and keep your inner self private.
b. Conceal very little from those around you; show your true self.
c. Adopt a public persona and always follow that identity to keep your inner self private.
d. Make sure to act like everyone else around you to blend in with the crowd.

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. One difficulty that early researchers encountered in identifying the good judge of personality was that ________.
a. a good judge in one context was not always a good judge in other contexts
b. clinical psychologists dismissed the findings, claiming good judgment of others required extensive training
c. no one could measure personality objectively in the first place
d. researchers did not have the statistical tools to study accuracy

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. A good judge of personality seems to be high in ________.
a. agency c. communion
b. self-monitoring d. absorption

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. A recent study found that women are more accurate than men in judging others. What was the explanation for this finding?
a. Women are better than men at figuring out what is unique about each person.
b. Men are biased to see everyone more negatively.
c. Men are biased to see everyone more positively.
d. Women are better than men at knowing what the average person is like.

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. According to the text, if peers based judgments on reputation and not observation, then researchers should find ________.
a. more agreement on unobservable traits compared to observable traits
b. more agreement on observable traits compared to unobservable traits
c. equal agreement for both observable and unobservable traits
d. no agreement in personality judgments whatsoever

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. What is the best description of the acquaintanceship effect?
a. Your acquaintances are more accurate than you are when judging your personality.
b. The more information you have about someone, the more accurate your judgment of his or her personality.
c. The longer you have known someone, the less accurate your judgment of his or her personality.
d. People judge their friends more favorably than they judge their enemies.

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. A small number of studies have investigated whether making an extra effort to be a good judge of personality improves accuracy. According to the textbook, what conclusions can be drawn from this literature?
a. Extra effort greatly improves accuracy.
b. Extra effort reduces accuracy by a considerable amount.
c. Extra effort improves judgments of close friends but not casual acquaintances.
d. The results of the existing studies are mixed.

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Abed is a stable, well-adjusted person. His behavior is fairly consistent and predictable; essentially, “what you see is what you get.” Abed would most likely be ________.
a. easy to judge accurately
b. a good judge of personality
c. a narcissist
d. someone who scores high on commonality

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Which of the following is an aspect of the “good” trait?
a. moderation c. visibility
b. unpredictability d. acquaintanceship

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. According to research that shows a link between a trait’s observability and the accuracy with which it is judged, which of the following traits would be easiest to judge accurately?
a. moodiness c. ruminativeness
b. talkativeness d. psychological mindedness

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Which of the following traits would be hardest to judge?
a. emotional stability c. physical appearance
b. extraversion d. social dominance

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. In making an overall judgment of your personality, which person should be most accurate?
a. a teacher
b. a lifelong best friend
c. a trained clinical psychologist
d. a classmate who has seen you most recently

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Which of the following is the strongest situation using the psychological definition of a strong situation?
a. a party c. a funeral
b. an unstructured job interview d. free time on a Saturday afternoon

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. The finding that more observable traits yield better interjudge agreement suggests that peer judgment is based more on ________ than on ________.
a. expectancies; the target’s self-judgments
b. a manufactured reputation; direct behavioral observation
c. direct behavioral observation; a manufactured reputation
d. stereotypes; expectancies

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. A salesperson has been married for 10 years, but her husband has never seen her do her job. According to the textbook, which of the following statements is true regarding the accurate prediction of her behavior during her work?
a. Her customers will be about as accurate as her husband in predicting her behavior at work.
b. Her husband will be much more accurate than her customers in predicting her behavior at work.
c. Her customers will be much more accurate than her husband in predicting her behavior at work.
d. None of the above are true.

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Imagine that Sally thinks she can judge Charlie’s personality better than Lucy’s personality. According to a recent study, which statement is most correct?
a. Sally will be more accurate in her judgments of Lucy.
b. Sally will be equally accurate in her judgments of Charlie and Lucy.
c. Sally will be more accurate in her judgments of Charlie.
d. Lucy will report a fairly negative view of Sally, if she is asked.

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Drawing on research described in the text, what would be a reasonable prediction about a group of introverts who are instructed to act extraverted for a week?
a. They will report increased happiness at the end of the week.
b. They will report being tired and depleted from the effort.
c. They will report increased feelings of closeness with others.
d. They will not be noticeably different after the study.

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Doug has known Manesh for more than 20 years. Jim has only known Manesh since he joined Jim’s department at Acme Advertising Agency 2 months ago. According to Colvin and Funder’s (1991) study of the boundaries on the acquaintanceship effect, if both Doug and Jim are asked to predict how Manesh will behave during a presentation at work next week, whose predictions will be more accurate?
a. Doug’s
b. Jim’s
c. The two predictions will be about equally accurate.
d. Neither Doug’s nor Jim’s; such behavior is not predictable.

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Difficult

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. What are the steps in the Realistic Accuracy Model (RAM) of personality judgment?
a. recall/adjustment/manipulation
b. realism/accuracy/manipulation
c. recall/activation/matching/detection
d. relevance/availability/detection/utilization

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Remembering

 

  1. A judge may see a target’s behavior, pay attention to the behavior, and use the behavior in his or her judgment about the target’s personality. However, for the personality judgment to be accurate, the ________.
a. observed behavior must be relevant to the trait being judged
b. behavior must be unusual and distinctive
c. judge must have observed the behavior on multiple occasions
d. personality trait must be cross-situationally consistent

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Imagine that you are at a party, and your best friend introduces you to a guy named David. You and your friend talk to David for an hour, and you both notice the hostile comments that he repeatedly makes about his roommate. Later, you and your friend discuss your impressions of David, and you find that you disagree about him. Your friend thinks that David’s comments were just good-natured joking and that he is a nice guy and a pretty funny fellow. You think that his comments were mean-spirited and that he is a hostile person. Your disagreement arises because you and your friend differ in the ________ stage of the Realistic Accuracy Model (RAM) of personality judgment.
a. detection c. utilization
b. availability d. judgment

 

 

ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Consider the following scenario: A courageous person rushes into a burning building to save a child. Which of the following represents a likely reason that accurate judgment of courageousness might fail?
a. Important cues for courageousness are not displayed by the actor.
b. The situation doesn’t allow for the display of courageousness.
c. A judge sees the courageous act and applies that information to her judgment.
d. A judge is busy texting on his phone and fails to notice the situation.

 

 

ANS:  D                    DIF:    Easy

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.8                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Consider the following scenario: A person sits quietly during a classroom lecture. Which of the following represents the most likely reason that accurate judgment of extraversion might fail?
a. Important cues for extraversion are readily displayed.
b. The situation doesn’t allow for the display of extraversion.
c. A judge sees no extraverted behavior and judges that the target is introverted.
d. A judge pays good attention and sees all the important behaviors.

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.8                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Consider the following scenario: A child cries for his father to take him to the park while they are at the library. Which of the following represents a likely reason that accurate judgment of the child’s openness to experience might fail?
a. Important cues for openness are not displayed.
b. The situation doesn’t allow for the display of openness.
c. A judge sees the tantrum and recognizes that the information isn’t relevant.
d. A judge is highly intelligent and notices important cues.

 

 

ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.8                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Which of the following is NOT one of the reasons that accuracy matters?
a. Personality judgments matter for things like promotion at our jobs.
b. Your reputation doesn’t matter much for your well-being and happiness.
c. We can’t escape personality judgment; friends and others will form impressions of us.
d. When we understand people better, we have better relationships with them.

 

 

ANS:  B                    DIF:    Easy               REF:   Accuracy Matters

OBJ:   5.1                 MSC:  Evaluating

 

MATCHING

 

Match the most applicable stage of the Realistic Accuracy Model with each hypothetical successful or failed judgment.

a. availability
b. relevance
c. utilization
d. detection
e. judgment
f. understanding

 

 

  1. A friend is revealing important information at a concert, but you fail to hear it.

 

  1. An attentive judge notices important patterns in a target’s speech.

 

  1. A judge accurately identifies another person’s trait.

 

  1. Cybil makes an active attempt to conceal neurotic behaviors from John.

 

  1. Jake makes a judgment of Marla’s high conscientiousness based on her friendliness.

 

  1. A judge fails to notice a critical behavior.

 

  1. The situation is not applicable for displaying a trait.

 

  1. After a lecture, you are asked to judge the talkativeness of another attendee.

 

  1. A good trait is displayed in a range of contexts.

 

  1. A friend confesses that he has a messy room, but you discount this information.

 

  1. ANS:  D                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

  1. ANS:  D                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

  1. ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

  1. ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

  1. ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

  1. ANS:  D                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

  1. ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

  1. ANS:  B                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

  1. ANS:  A                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

  1. ANS:  C                    DIF:    Moderate

REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Analyzing

 

SHORT ANSWER

 

  1. What is constructivism, and why does this philosophy preclude the evaluation of the accuracy of personality judgments? Describe the critical realist alternative to this point of view. How does this perspective enable research concerning the accuracy of personality judgments?

 

ANS:

Answers will vary.

 

DIF:    Difficult         REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment

OBJ:   5.4                 MSC:  Evaluating

 

  1. What is a moderator variable? Identify the four moderators of accuracy detailed in the text, and provide clear examples for each moderator.

 

ANS:

Answers will vary.

 

DIF:    Moderate        REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. What is the acquaintanceship effect, and what boundary condition did Colvin and Funder (1991) discover? Provide a clear example to illustrate this boundary condition.

 

ANS:

Answers will vary.

 

DIF:    Moderate        REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: Moderators of Accuracy

OBJ:   5.6                 MSC:  Understanding

 

  1. Describe the four steps of the Realistic Accuracy Model. Apply those steps to the accurate judgment of the trait of honesty.

 

ANS:

Answers will vary.

 

DIF:    Moderate        REF:   The Accuracy of Personality Judgment: The Realistic Accuracy Model

OBJ:   5.7                 MSC:  Applying

 

  1. Describe why everyday judgments of personality are important. Describe consequences in the interpersonal domain as well as the achievement-related domain of work or school.

 

ANS:

Answers will vary.

 

DIF:    Moderate        REF:   Accuracy Matters                            OBJ:   5.1

MSC:  Evaluating

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