Spring 2015|| General Psychology || BBA

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Spring 2015|| General Psychology || BBA

Published by: Dikshya

Published date: 27 Mar 2023

Spring 2015|| General Psychology || BBA

                                                                    POKHARA UNIVERSITY

 

Level: Bachelor                                                 Semester-Spring                     Year :2015

Programme: BBA/BBA-BI/BBA-TT/BCIS/BHCM                                         Full Marks: 100

Course: General Psychology                                                                       Pass Marks: 45:

Time: 3hrs

 

Candidates are required to give their answers in their own words as far as practicable.

The figures in the margin indicate full marks.

 

                                                                  Section "A"

                                                        Very Short Answer Questions

 

Attempt all the questions.                                                                                10*2

1. State the goal of psychology.

 2. What is nerve impulse?

3. Specify the internally caused behavior?

4. What is reinforcement?

5. Point out the cause of forgetting?

6. What are the steps of problem solving thinking?

7. Who are the mentally retarded people?

8. Differentiate between displayed and felt emotions.

9. Define personality.

10. State in brief the consequences of stress.

 

                                                                  Section "B"           

                                                 Descriptive Answer Questions

Attempt any six questions                                                                                    6*10

11.  Human behavior can be studied in a laboratory condition. Describe with the help of experimental method.

12. How is information processed in memory? Explain with the help of Information Processing Model.

13. Describe the structure and functions of the neuron.

14. What is perception? Explain the laws of grouping.

15. Discuss the role of heredity and the role of environment in determining intelligence with its suitable example.

 16 .What is projective test? Distinguish between Thematic Apperception Test and Rorschach Inkblot Test.

 17. Explain motivation with the help of expectancy theory and equity theory.

 

                                                             Section "C"

                                                        Case Analysis

18. Read the case situation given below and answer the questions that follow.        20

John B. Watson and Rosalie Rayner showed how conditioning could be used on a human infant. The study led to ethical questions on research with humans. From such research, Watson concluded that there are only a few instinctive reflexes in humans, among them, sucking, reaching, and grasping. In addition, infants have three innate emotional responses to stimuli: fear at hearing a loud sound or at suddenly being dropped; rage when arm or head movements are forcibly restrained; and love when stroked, rocked, gently patted, and the like.

 

Watson and Rayner hypothesized that most human behaviors and emotional reactions are built up of conditioned responses - When an emotionally exciting object stimulates the subject simultaneously with an object not emotionally exciting, the latter object may in time arouse the same emotional reaction as the former object.

 

Watson and Rayner presented Albert (a well-adjusted 9-month-old) with many objects, including a rat, blocks, a rabbit, a dog, a monkey, masks with and without hair, cotton, wool, and burning newspapers. Albert showed no fear of any of these objects they were all neutral stimuli for the fear response.

 

Watson and Rayner decided that, when Albert was 11 months old, they would attempt to condition him to fear rats. They began by placing a furry white rat in front of him. Albert would reach out to touch it, and each time he did, one of Watson's assistants would strike a metal bar with a hammer behind Albert. The first time the metal bar was struck, Albert fell forward and burled-his head in a pillow. The next time he reached for the rat and the bar was struck, Albert began to whimper. The noise, the unconditioned stimulus, brought about a naturally unconditioned response, fear. After only a few such pairings, the rat became a conditioned stimulus that elicited a conditioned response, fear.

 

Five days after Watson and Rayner conditioned Albert to fear rats, they presented him with blocks, a rabbit, a rat, and a dog, each alone. They also showed him a number of other stimuli, including a Santa Claus mask. Albert reacted fearfully to all but the blocks. His conditioned fear response generalized to include the rabbit and all of the white furry objects he was shown, but not to any dissimilar toys.

 

One of Watson's students, Mary Cover Jones (1924, 1974), developed an extinction procedure called counter conditioning to reduce people's existing fears. Peter was a boy who was extremely fearful of rabbits. Jones helped Peter eliminate his fear by pairing the feared object (the rabbit) with pleasant experiences, such as eating ice cream or receiving special attention.

 

Questions:

a) Did the results of Watson and Rayner's experiment support their hypothesis? Explain.

 b) How did Albert's response become generalized?

c) How were the principles of classical conditioning used to reduce Peter's fear of rabbits?

d) How does classical conditioning differ from operant conditioning?