Anthropology final Ddu
https://t.me/diredawa2015/202?single
https://t.me/diredawa2015/202?single
Telegram
DDU work sheet
π1
All ddu final
Social and natural
Ddu working sheet:
Economic final Ddu
1, https://t.me/tumimfamil/391?single
2, https://t.me/tumimfamil/407?single
3, https://t.me/tumimfamil/419?single
Logic final DDU
1, https://t.me/c/2104872456/769
2, https://t.me/c/2104872456/832
3, https://t.me/c/2104872456/868
4, https://t.me/c/2104872456/904
5,https://t.me/diredawa2015/206?single
Psychology final DDU
https://t.me/diredawa2015/193?single
https://t.me/c/2104872456/771
Short note
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English final Ddu
1, https://t.me/diredawa2015/210?single
2. https://t.me/diredawa2015/171
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Physics final
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https://t.me/c/2104872456/824
https://t.me/c/2104872456/826
https://t.me/c/2104872456/845
https://t.me/c/2104872456/908
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Global trends Final Ddu
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Anthropology final Ddu
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Physical fitness final atanibibu
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Shortnote
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Geography final
https://t.me/c/2104872456/863
Short note
https://t.me/yohana1234567/68?single u 1 - 4
https://t.me/yohana1234567/837?single u 4 -6
Math final
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Social and natural
Ddu working sheet:
Economic final Ddu
1, https://t.me/tumimfamil/391?single
2, https://t.me/tumimfamil/407?single
3, https://t.me/tumimfamil/419?single
Logic final DDU
1, https://t.me/c/2104872456/769
2, https://t.me/c/2104872456/832
3, https://t.me/c/2104872456/868
4, https://t.me/c/2104872456/904
5,https://t.me/diredawa2015/206?single
Psychology final DDU
https://t.me/diredawa2015/193?single
https://t.me/c/2104872456/771
Short note
https://t.me/yohana1234567/846?single
English final Ddu
1, https://t.me/diredawa2015/210?single
2. https://t.me/diredawa2015/171
Short note https://t.me/diredawa2015/122?single
Work sheet
https://t.me/yohana1234567/937
Physics final
https://t.me/c/2104872456/367
https://t.me/c/2104872456/824
https://t.me/c/2104872456/826
https://t.me/c/2104872456/845
https://t.me/c/2104872456/908
With work sheets
Global trends Final Ddu
https://t.me/diredawa2015/181?single
Anthropology final Ddu
https://t.me/diredawa2015/202?single
Physical fitness final atanibibu
https://t.me/c/2104872456/36
Shortnote
https://t.me/c/2104872456/916
Geography final
https://t.me/c/2104872456/863
Short note
https://t.me/yohana1234567/68?single u 1 - 4
https://t.me/yohana1234567/837?single u 4 -6
Math final
https://t.me/c/2104872456/873
Telegram
EYOB in DDU freshman
π3β€1π₯°1π1
πBATCH OF STUDENT pinned Β«All ddu final Social and natural Ddu working sheet: Economic final Ddu 1, https://t.me/tumimfamil/391?single 2, https://t.me/tumimfamil/407?single 3, https://t.me/tumimfamil/419?single Logic final DDU 1, https://t.me/c/2104872456/769 2, https://t.me/c/2104872456/832β¦Β»
Forwarded from Campus Handout
π² Logic Study Book
Chapter 5
β‘οΈ αα α ααα¬α½αα½α α ααα£α₯ αααα£α!
α¨ Fallacy ααα΅ α α«α³α΅α₯α π
--------------------------------------------------
Study Book αα α α«α·α ?
πΈ α¨αα αααα α₯ α₯α ααα΅α³αα΅ α¨ααα½ α αα Short Note
πΈ αα«αα³αα± ααα΅ α¨ Short Note α α£α α«α α¨ ααα α¨αα αα³α¦α½ α₯α» α¨α°α«α°α±α α΅ "πKey Points" α¨α°α£α αα΅
πΈ α¨α₯α«αα³αα± αα₯α΅ α αα α¨α°αα«α© α©αα¨αα²α² α¨α°αα£α± αα°ααα½ α¨α ααα΅ α₯α α α αα₯α«αͺα«αΈα α¨ Module α αα£αα΅
πΈ α₯αα²αα ααα°α ααα α΅ α αα α¨αα Practice Questions
--------------------------------------------------
π±α¨ Logic Study Book α ααα¬α½αα½α α ααααα΅ α₯ααα αα΅αΆα½ αααα¨α±
π α ααα¬α½αα αααα¨α΅
π α¨α ααα¬α½α α α ααα αααͺαͺα« ( User Guide )
π¨βπ α ααα¬α½ααα α΅α΅α αα α¨α°αΈαα«αΉ ααα Login Password α¨α¨α³αΉ α @campus_pdf α ααα©α
Chapter 5
β‘οΈ αα α ααα¬α½αα½α α ααα£α₯ αααα£α!
α¨ Fallacy ααα΅ α α«α³α΅α₯α π
--------------------------------------------------
Study Book αα α α«α·α ?
πΈ α¨αα αααα α₯ α₯α ααα΅α³αα΅ α¨ααα½ α αα Short Note
πΈ αα«αα³αα± ααα΅ α¨ Short Note α α£α α«α α¨ ααα α¨αα αα³α¦α½ α₯α» α¨α°α«α°α±α α΅ "πKey Points" α¨α°α£α αα΅
πΈ α¨α₯α«αα³αα± αα₯α΅ α αα α¨α°αα«α© α©αα¨αα²α² α¨α°αα£α± αα°ααα½ α¨α ααα΅ α₯α α α αα₯α«αͺα«αΈα α¨ Module α αα£αα΅
πΈ α₯αα²αα ααα°α ααα α΅ α αα α¨αα Practice Questions
--------------------------------------------------
π±α¨ Logic Study Book α ααα¬α½αα½α α ααααα΅ α₯ααα αα΅αΆα½ αααα¨α±
π α ααα¬α½αα αααα¨α΅
π α¨α ααα¬α½α α α ααα αααͺαͺα« ( User Guide )
π¨βπ α ααα¬α½ααα α΅α΅α αα α¨α°αΈαα«αΉ ααα Login Password α¨α¨α³αΉ α @campus_pdf α ααα©α
β€1π1
memory and forgetting question:
1. What is memory?
a) A passive storage unit
b) A process of encoding, storage, and retrieval of information
c) A temporary sensory experience
2. Which term describes the initial process of registering information into memory?
a) Forgetting
b) Encoding
c) Retrieval
3. What is short-term memory also known as?
a) Working memory
b) Long-term memory
c) Sensory memory
4. Which type of memory has a limited capacity and duration?
a) Short-term memory
b) Long-term memory
c) Sensory memory
5. What is the process of keeping information in memory over time?
a) Retrieval
b) Encoding
c) Storage
6. What is proactive interference in memory?
a) New information interferes with old information
b) Previously learned information interferes with new information
c) Memories fade away naturally
7. Which type of memory involves conscious recollection of past events and experiences?
a) Implicit memory
b) Procedural memory
c) Explicit memory
8. Retrograde amnesia is characterized by the inability to:
a) Remember events that occurred after amnesia
b) Remember events that occurred before amnesia
c) Remember recent events
9. What is the term for the inability to form new memories?
a) Anterograde amnesia
b) Retrograde amnesia
c) Retroactive interference
10. Decay theory suggests that forgetting occurs due to:
a) New memories interfering with old ones
b) The fading of memory traces over time
c) Inaccurate encoding of memories
11. What is a mnemonic device?
a) A medication for memory enhancement
b) A memory aid or trick to help recall information
c) A disorder affecting memory retention
12. Which of the following is not a stage of memory?
a) Forgetting
b) Encoding
c) Retrieval
13. What is the term for the phenomenon where new memories disrupt the recall of old memories?
a) Proactive interference
b) Retrograde amnesia
c) Retroactive interference
14. What is implicit memory?
a) Memory with conscious recollection
b) Memory for facts and knowledge
c) Memory without conscious awareness
15. The hippocampus is associated with which type of memory?
a) Working memory
b) Long-term memory
c) Short-term memory
16. Which type of memory involves skills and procedures?
a) Semantic memory
b) Procedural memory
c) Episodic memory
17. How does retrieval cues affect memory recall?
a) Enhances memory recall by providing clues
b) Suppresses memory recall by introducing distractions
c) Doesn't affect memory recall
18. What is context-dependent memory?
a) Recalling information in different environmental contexts
b) Memory retrieval being improved by returning to the context where the memory was formed
c) Forgetting information due to lack of environmental cues
19. What is state-dependent memory?
a) Memory retrieval influenced by an individual's current emotional state
b) Retrieval of memories independently of one's emotional state
c) Memory improvement through emotional states
20. What is the term for the action of revising information repeatedly to aid memory retention?
a) Elaborative rehearsal
b) Maintenance rehearsal
c) Chunking
1. What is memory?
a) A passive storage unit
b) A process of encoding, storage, and retrieval of information
c) A temporary sensory experience
2. Which term describes the initial process of registering information into memory?
a) Forgetting
b) Encoding
c) Retrieval
3. What is short-term memory also known as?
a) Working memory
b) Long-term memory
c) Sensory memory
4. Which type of memory has a limited capacity and duration?
a) Short-term memory
b) Long-term memory
c) Sensory memory
5. What is the process of keeping information in memory over time?
a) Retrieval
b) Encoding
c) Storage
6. What is proactive interference in memory?
a) New information interferes with old information
b) Previously learned information interferes with new information
c) Memories fade away naturally
7. Which type of memory involves conscious recollection of past events and experiences?
a) Implicit memory
b) Procedural memory
c) Explicit memory
8. Retrograde amnesia is characterized by the inability to:
a) Remember events that occurred after amnesia
b) Remember events that occurred before amnesia
c) Remember recent events
9. What is the term for the inability to form new memories?
a) Anterograde amnesia
b) Retrograde amnesia
c) Retroactive interference
10. Decay theory suggests that forgetting occurs due to:
a) New memories interfering with old ones
b) The fading of memory traces over time
c) Inaccurate encoding of memories
11. What is a mnemonic device?
a) A medication for memory enhancement
b) A memory aid or trick to help recall information
c) A disorder affecting memory retention
12. Which of the following is not a stage of memory?
a) Forgetting
b) Encoding
c) Retrieval
13. What is the term for the phenomenon where new memories disrupt the recall of old memories?
a) Proactive interference
b) Retrograde amnesia
c) Retroactive interference
14. What is implicit memory?
a) Memory with conscious recollection
b) Memory for facts and knowledge
c) Memory without conscious awareness
15. The hippocampus is associated with which type of memory?
a) Working memory
b) Long-term memory
c) Short-term memory
16. Which type of memory involves skills and procedures?
a) Semantic memory
b) Procedural memory
c) Episodic memory
17. How does retrieval cues affect memory recall?
a) Enhances memory recall by providing clues
b) Suppresses memory recall by introducing distractions
c) Doesn't affect memory recall
18. What is context-dependent memory?
a) Recalling information in different environmental contexts
b) Memory retrieval being improved by returning to the context where the memory was formed
c) Forgetting information due to lack of environmental cues
19. What is state-dependent memory?
a) Memory retrieval influenced by an individual's current emotional state
b) Retrieval of memories independently of one's emotional state
c) Memory improvement through emotional states
20. What is the term for the action of revising information repeatedly to aid memory retention?
a) Elaborative rehearsal
b) Maintenance rehearsal
c) Chunking
π7β€1
πBATCH OF STUDENT
memory and forgetting question: 1. What is memory? a) A passive storage unit b) A process of encoding, storage, and retrieval of information c) A temporary sensory experience 2. Which term describes the initial process of registering informationβ¦
Telegram
EYOB in studying group for yohana
memory and forgetting:
1. What is memory?
Answer: b) A process of encoding, storage, and retrieval of information
2. Which term describes the initial process of registering information into memory?
Answer: b) Encoding
3. What is short-term memoryβ¦
1. What is memory?
Answer: b) A process of encoding, storage, and retrieval of information
2. Which term describes the initial process of registering information into memory?
Answer: b) Encoding
3. What is short-term memoryβ¦
β€2π₯1π1
topic of motivation and emotion:
1. What is motivation?
a) A state of being content and satisfied
b) The internal process that activates, guides, and maintains behavior
c) A response to external rewards only
2. Which theory of motivation suggests that behavior is driven by the desire to satisfy biological needs?
a) Drive reduction theory
b) Humanistic theory
c) Incentive theory
3. What is intrinsic motivation?
a) Motivation that comes from external rewards
b) Motivation that comes from within oneself
c) Motivation solely based on performance outcomes
4. According to Maslow's hierarchy of needs, which need must be fulfilled first?
a) Esteem needs
b) Self-actualization needs
c) Physiological needs
5. Which theory of emotion suggests that physiological arousal precedes the experience of emotion?
a) Cannon-Bard theory
b) James-Lange theory
c) Schachter-Singer theory
6. What is the fight-or-flight response in relation to emotion?
a) A response to stress involving rapid heartbeat and breathing
b) A state of calmness and relaxation
c) A cognitive appraisal of a situation
7. How does the Yerkes-Dodson law relate arousal and performance?
a) Higher arousal always leads to better performance
b) Moderate arousal leads to optimal performance
c) Low arousal enhances performance the most
8. What is the role of the amygdala in emotion?
a) It controls voluntary movements related to emotional responses
b) It processes and regulates emotions, particularly fear
c) It is responsible for higher-order cognitive functions
9. What is the purpose of the broaden-and-build theory of positive emotions?
a) To narrow cognitive focus for efficient decision-making
b) To enhance cognitive flexibility and build long-term resources
c) To suppress emotional responses in stressful situations
10. Which theory suggests that emotions are the result of cognitive appraisals of situations?
a) James-Lange theory
b) Schachter-Singer theory
c) Lazarus theory
11. What is the role of dopamine in motivation?
a) It regulates stress responses in the brain
b) It is involved in the brain's reward system
c) It controls heart rate and breathing
12. What is the difference between extrinsic and intrinsic motivation?
a) Extrinsic is from external rewards, intrinsic is from internal desires
b) Extrinsic is long-lasting, intrinsic is short-lived
c) Extrinsic is based on survival instincts, intrinsic is based on social needs
13. What is the primary function of the hypothalamus in motivation?
a) It oversees complex cognitive processes related to motivation
b) It regulates basic needs such as hunger and thirst
c) It processes memories associated with motivation
14. How is self-determination theory related to motivation?
a) It focuses on the motivation to fulfill one's potential and self-actualization
b) It emphasizes social factors influencing motivation
c) It explains how individuals seek to minimize harm and maximize benefits in motivation
15. What is the role of goal-setting in motivation theory?
a) Setting clear goals reduces motivation
b) Having clear goals increases motivation and performance
c) Goals have no influence on motivation
16. Which brain structure is responsible for the regulation of emotions such as fear and aggression?
a) Prefrontal cortex
b) Hippocampus
c) Amygdala
17. According to the Two-Factor Theory of emotion, what are the two factors involved in the experience of emotion?
a) Physiological arousal and cognitive interpretation
b) External rewards and internal motivations
c) Innate responses and learned behaviors
18. What role does the prefrontal cortex play in motivation?
a) It regulates basic physiological needs
b) It is involved in decision-making and goal-setting
c) It controls emotional responses in the brain
1. What is motivation?
a) A state of being content and satisfied
b) The internal process that activates, guides, and maintains behavior
c) A response to external rewards only
2. Which theory of motivation suggests that behavior is driven by the desire to satisfy biological needs?
a) Drive reduction theory
b) Humanistic theory
c) Incentive theory
3. What is intrinsic motivation?
a) Motivation that comes from external rewards
b) Motivation that comes from within oneself
c) Motivation solely based on performance outcomes
4. According to Maslow's hierarchy of needs, which need must be fulfilled first?
a) Esteem needs
b) Self-actualization needs
c) Physiological needs
5. Which theory of emotion suggests that physiological arousal precedes the experience of emotion?
a) Cannon-Bard theory
b) James-Lange theory
c) Schachter-Singer theory
6. What is the fight-or-flight response in relation to emotion?
a) A response to stress involving rapid heartbeat and breathing
b) A state of calmness and relaxation
c) A cognitive appraisal of a situation
7. How does the Yerkes-Dodson law relate arousal and performance?
a) Higher arousal always leads to better performance
b) Moderate arousal leads to optimal performance
c) Low arousal enhances performance the most
8. What is the role of the amygdala in emotion?
a) It controls voluntary movements related to emotional responses
b) It processes and regulates emotions, particularly fear
c) It is responsible for higher-order cognitive functions
9. What is the purpose of the broaden-and-build theory of positive emotions?
a) To narrow cognitive focus for efficient decision-making
b) To enhance cognitive flexibility and build long-term resources
c) To suppress emotional responses in stressful situations
10. Which theory suggests that emotions are the result of cognitive appraisals of situations?
a) James-Lange theory
b) Schachter-Singer theory
c) Lazarus theory
11. What is the role of dopamine in motivation?
a) It regulates stress responses in the brain
b) It is involved in the brain's reward system
c) It controls heart rate and breathing
12. What is the difference between extrinsic and intrinsic motivation?
a) Extrinsic is from external rewards, intrinsic is from internal desires
b) Extrinsic is long-lasting, intrinsic is short-lived
c) Extrinsic is based on survival instincts, intrinsic is based on social needs
13. What is the primary function of the hypothalamus in motivation?
a) It oversees complex cognitive processes related to motivation
b) It regulates basic needs such as hunger and thirst
c) It processes memories associated with motivation
14. How is self-determination theory related to motivation?
a) It focuses on the motivation to fulfill one's potential and self-actualization
b) It emphasizes social factors influencing motivation
c) It explains how individuals seek to minimize harm and maximize benefits in motivation
15. What is the role of goal-setting in motivation theory?
a) Setting clear goals reduces motivation
b) Having clear goals increases motivation and performance
c) Goals have no influence on motivation
16. Which brain structure is responsible for the regulation of emotions such as fear and aggression?
a) Prefrontal cortex
b) Hippocampus
c) Amygdala
17. According to the Two-Factor Theory of emotion, what are the two factors involved in the experience of emotion?
a) Physiological arousal and cognitive interpretation
b) External rewards and internal motivations
c) Innate responses and learned behaviors
18. What role does the prefrontal cortex play in motivation?
a) It regulates basic physiological needs
b) It is involved in decision-making and goal-setting
c) It controls emotional responses in the brain
π7
19. How does the self-efficacy theory relate to motivation?
a) It focuses on the influence of others on motivation
b) It emphasizes an individual's belief in their ability to succeed
c) It explains how physiological needs drive motivation
20. What is emotional intelligence?
a) The ability to understand and manage one's emotions and those of others
b) The capacity to suppress emotional responses
c) The ability to isolate emotions from decision-making processes
a) It focuses on the influence of others on motivation
b) It emphasizes an individual's belief in their ability to succeed
c) It explains how physiological needs drive motivation
20. What is emotional intelligence?
a) The ability to understand and manage one's emotions and those of others
b) The capacity to suppress emotional responses
c) The ability to isolate emotions from decision-making processes
πBATCH OF STUDENT
19. How does the self-efficacy theory relate to motivation? a) It focuses on the influence of others on motivation b) It emphasizes an individual's belief in their ability to succeed c) It explains how physiological needs drive motivation 20.β¦
Telegram
EYOB in studying group for yohana
topic of motivation and emotion:
1. What is motivation?
Answer: b) The internal process that activates, guides, and maintains behavior
2. Which theory of motivation suggests that behavior is driven by the desire to satisfy biological needs?
Answer:β¦
1. What is motivation?
Answer: b) The internal process that activates, guides, and maintains behavior
2. Which theory of motivation suggests that behavior is driven by the desire to satisfy biological needs?
Answer:β¦
β€1π₯1
the topic of personality:
1. What is personality?
a) A fixed set of traits that never change
b) An individual's unique pattern of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors
c) A result of genetic factors only
2. Which theory of personality emphasizes the role of the unconscious mind?
a) Trait theory
b) Humanistic theory
c) Psychodynamic theory
3. What are the Big Five personality traits?
a) Openness, Conscientiousness, Extroversion, Agreeableness, Neuroticism
b) Confidence, Assertiveness, Sociability, Humility, Flexibility
c) Intelligence, Competence, Confidence, Sociability, Emotionality
4. According to Freud, which part of the personality operates on the pleasure principle?
a) Ego
b) Superego
c) Id
5. What is self-efficacy in personality psychology?
a) A person's actual ability to master particular tasks
b) A person's belief in their ability to succeed in specific situations
c) A person's self-esteem level
6. How does the concept of self-concept differ from self-esteem?
a) Self-concept refers to a person's self-worth, while self-esteem refers to their self-identity
b) Self-concept is stable and unchanging, while self-esteem can fluctuate
c) Self-concept encompasses a person's beliefs about themselves, while self-esteem reflects feelings about those beliefs
7. What is the social cognitive perspective on personality?
a) It emphasizes the role of unconscious thoughts in shaping personality
b) It focuses on how personality is influenced by observational learning and personal experiences
c) It suggests that personality is determined solely by genetic factors
8. According to Carl Rogers, what is the key element in fostering personal growth and development?
a) Self-actualization
b) Self-discrepancy
c) Self-regulation
9. What is the role of heritability in personality traits?
a) Heritability refers to the extent to which genetic factors contribute to individual differences in a specific trait
b) Heritability determines a person's personality regardless of environmental factors
c) Heritability has no impact on personality traits
10. What is the difference between introversion and extroversion according to the Five Factor Model of personality?
a) Extroverts tend to be more outgoing and social, while introverts are more reserved and quiet
b) Introverts are more emotionally stable than extroverts
c) Extroverts are more open to new experiences compared to introverts
11. How does reciprocal determinism explain personality development?
a) Personality is shaped by interactions between an individual's traits, environment, and behavior
b) Genetics alone determine one's personality
c) Personality is fixed and cannot change
12. What is the purpose of projective tests in assessing personality?
a) They provide objective measurements of specific personality traits
b) They present ambiguous stimuli to reveal unconscious aspects of personality
c) They are based on self-report questionnaires
13. What is the self-serving bias in relation to personality?
a) The tendency to attribute successes to internal factors and failures to external factors
b) The belief in one's ability to succeed in challenging situations
c) The tendency to underestimate one's own capabilities
14. According to the trait theory of personality, what are traits?
a) Stable characteristics that influence behavior across various situations
b) Temporary states that change frequently
c) Traits are irrelevant to personality development
15. What is the purpose of the MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory) test?
a) It assesses mental health and detects psychological disorders
b) It measures intelligence and cognitive abilities
c) It evaluates emotional intelligence
1. What is personality?
a) A fixed set of traits that never change
b) An individual's unique pattern of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors
c) A result of genetic factors only
2. Which theory of personality emphasizes the role of the unconscious mind?
a) Trait theory
b) Humanistic theory
c) Psychodynamic theory
3. What are the Big Five personality traits?
a) Openness, Conscientiousness, Extroversion, Agreeableness, Neuroticism
b) Confidence, Assertiveness, Sociability, Humility, Flexibility
c) Intelligence, Competence, Confidence, Sociability, Emotionality
4. According to Freud, which part of the personality operates on the pleasure principle?
a) Ego
b) Superego
c) Id
5. What is self-efficacy in personality psychology?
a) A person's actual ability to master particular tasks
b) A person's belief in their ability to succeed in specific situations
c) A person's self-esteem level
6. How does the concept of self-concept differ from self-esteem?
a) Self-concept refers to a person's self-worth, while self-esteem refers to their self-identity
b) Self-concept is stable and unchanging, while self-esteem can fluctuate
c) Self-concept encompasses a person's beliefs about themselves, while self-esteem reflects feelings about those beliefs
7. What is the social cognitive perspective on personality?
a) It emphasizes the role of unconscious thoughts in shaping personality
b) It focuses on how personality is influenced by observational learning and personal experiences
c) It suggests that personality is determined solely by genetic factors
8. According to Carl Rogers, what is the key element in fostering personal growth and development?
a) Self-actualization
b) Self-discrepancy
c) Self-regulation
9. What is the role of heritability in personality traits?
a) Heritability refers to the extent to which genetic factors contribute to individual differences in a specific trait
b) Heritability determines a person's personality regardless of environmental factors
c) Heritability has no impact on personality traits
10. What is the difference between introversion and extroversion according to the Five Factor Model of personality?
a) Extroverts tend to be more outgoing and social, while introverts are more reserved and quiet
b) Introverts are more emotionally stable than extroverts
c) Extroverts are more open to new experiences compared to introverts
11. How does reciprocal determinism explain personality development?
a) Personality is shaped by interactions between an individual's traits, environment, and behavior
b) Genetics alone determine one's personality
c) Personality is fixed and cannot change
12. What is the purpose of projective tests in assessing personality?
a) They provide objective measurements of specific personality traits
b) They present ambiguous stimuli to reveal unconscious aspects of personality
c) They are based on self-report questionnaires
13. What is the self-serving bias in relation to personality?
a) The tendency to attribute successes to internal factors and failures to external factors
b) The belief in one's ability to succeed in challenging situations
c) The tendency to underestimate one's own capabilities
14. According to the trait theory of personality, what are traits?
a) Stable characteristics that influence behavior across various situations
b) Temporary states that change frequently
c) Traits are irrelevant to personality development
15. What is the purpose of the MMPI (Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory) test?
a) It assesses mental health and detects psychological disorders
b) It measures intelligence and cognitive abilities
c) It evaluates emotional intelligence
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16. What is the difference between self-report measures and behavioral assessments in personality testing?
a) Self-report measures rely on observable behaviors, while behavioral assessments rely on self-perception
b) Self-report measures are based on personal judgment, while behavioral assessments observe actual behavior
c) Self-report measures are more objective than behavioral assessments
17. How does self-verification theory influence personality development?
a) Individuals seek confirmation of their self-concept, even if negative
b) Individuals strive to enhance their self-esteem through positive feedback
c) Personality traits are solely shaped by environmental factors
18. What is the role of the defense mechanisms in Freud's psychoanalytic theory of personality?
a) Defense mechanisms protect an individual from harm by hiding true feelings
b) Defense mechanisms represent an individual's moral standards and values
c) Defense mechanisms have no impact on personality development
19. How does the concept of the "self" differ in Eastern and Western cultures?
a) Eastern cultures emphasize collectivism and social harmony, while Western cultures focus on individualism and personal achievement
b) Eastern and Western cultures have identical views on the concept of self
c) Eastern cultures prioritize personal goals, while Western cultures stress communal well-being
20. What is the role of culture in shaping personality?
a) Culture has minimal impact on personality development
b) Culture influences the values, beliefs, and behaviors that shape personality
c) Personality is entirely genetically determined and unaffected by culture
a) Self-report measures rely on observable behaviors, while behavioral assessments rely on self-perception
b) Self-report measures are based on personal judgment, while behavioral assessments observe actual behavior
c) Self-report measures are more objective than behavioral assessments
17. How does self-verification theory influence personality development?
a) Individuals seek confirmation of their self-concept, even if negative
b) Individuals strive to enhance their self-esteem through positive feedback
c) Personality traits are solely shaped by environmental factors
18. What is the role of the defense mechanisms in Freud's psychoanalytic theory of personality?
a) Defense mechanisms protect an individual from harm by hiding true feelings
b) Defense mechanisms represent an individual's moral standards and values
c) Defense mechanisms have no impact on personality development
19. How does the concept of the "self" differ in Eastern and Western cultures?
a) Eastern cultures emphasize collectivism and social harmony, while Western cultures focus on individualism and personal achievement
b) Eastern and Western cultures have identical views on the concept of self
c) Eastern cultures prioritize personal goals, while Western cultures stress communal well-being
20. What is the role of culture in shaping personality?
a) Culture has minimal impact on personality development
b) Culture influences the values, beliefs, and behaviors that shape personality
c) Personality is entirely genetically determined and unaffected by culture
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πBATCH OF STUDENT
16. What is the difference between self-report measures and behavioral assessments in personality testing? a) Self-report measures rely on observable behaviors, while behavioral assessments rely on self-perception b) Self-report measures are basedβ¦
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EYOB in studying group for yohana
Topic of personality answers:
1. What is personality?
Answer: b) An individual's unique pattern of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors
2. Which theory of personality emphasizes the role of the unconscious mind?
Answer: c) Psychodynamic theory
3. Whatβ¦
1. What is personality?
Answer: b) An individual's unique pattern of thoughts, feelings, and behaviors
2. Which theory of personality emphasizes the role of the unconscious mind?
Answer: c) Psychodynamic theory
3. Whatβ¦
Questions
Unit 4 memory and forgetting
https://t.me/diredawa2015/228
Answer
https://t.me/diredawa2015/229
Unit 5 motivation and emotion
https://t.me/diredawa2015/230
Answer https://t.me/diredawa2015/232
Unit 6 PERSONALITY
https://t.me/diredawa2015/233
Answer https://t.me/diredawa2015/235
Unit 7
https://t.me/diredawa2015/237
Answers
https://t.me/yohana1234567/989
Unit 4 memory and forgetting
https://t.me/diredawa2015/228
Answer
https://t.me/diredawa2015/229
Unit 5 motivation and emotion
https://t.me/diredawa2015/230
Answer https://t.me/diredawa2015/232
Unit 6 PERSONALITY
https://t.me/diredawa2015/233
Answer https://t.me/diredawa2015/235
Unit 7
https://t.me/diredawa2015/237
Answers
https://t.me/yohana1234567/989
