Found the 2011 AP Psych raw score conversion chart from an online syllabus:</p>
AP GRADE QUALIFICATION
5 - Extremely well qualified –110 points
4 - Well qualified – 90 points
3 – Qualified – 75 points
2 - Possibly qualified
1 - No recommendation</p>
In think its late in childhood. What does childhood mean, 4-8?</p>
Freud’s phallic stage = imitating parent of same sex to attract parent of opposite sex. (Oedipus/Electra) This happens at a pretty early age…</p>
it is definitely not cocktail party effect as that only occurs when ur name is called.</p>
Psychologists can definitely release your info if you give a written okay. </p>
The other one wasn’t cocktail party effect. Yeah, that’s only your name.</p>
I think it was cocktail! From Wiki… " The cocktail party effect (also known as selective attention) is the phenomenon of being able to focus one’s auditory attention on a particular stimulus while filtering out a range of other stimuli…"</p>
It was occipital lobe…and standard deviation does not change due to addition!</p>
I only think I got a few wrong on the multiple choice, but some of the questions were truly out there. Some of the questions required some deep thinking for me, but the answers were there. But what was all that about compliance and that strangely named type of memory in 1. A? And what was the third bullet again?</p>
Furthermore, did anyone else write about Annabelle’s struggle to adapt to her college peers’ mistreating her due to their ethnocentrism, as she was half iguana and half German?</p>
For the first one about standard deviation, did it decrease or increase?q</p>
If you look at the definition of Cocktail Party Effect that I put up there somewhere it doesn’t specify only your name, it also counts just separating a stimulus. But dichotic also does that. So personally I think the question was too close to call.</p>
Oh, I looked it up, and a lot of actual Psychologists say that they can only release with written consent. Darn. The Barron’s AP Book didn’t address that at all so I just assumed.</p>
Directly from 1999 released AP Test:</p>
"A hostile person with a type A personality is most at risk for developing which of the following?</p>
A. Phobias
B. Heart Disease.
C. Bulimia Nervosa.
D. Multiple Personality
E. Antisocial Personality"</p>
Answer is B.</p>
Also:
[Hostility</a>, not “Type A personality”, linked to heart disease Dr. Brian Grady’s blog](<a href=“http://briangrady.■■■■■■■■■■■■■/2009/04/13/hostility-not-type-a-personality-linked-to-heart-disease/]Hostility”>Hostility, not “Type A personality”, linked to heart disease | Dr. Brian Grady's blog)</p>
@mrrypea: prospective memory = remembering to apply to colleges before the deadline. Compliance, was for me, a need to comply to her family’s past of going to only 1 university… it doesn’t sound right to me though. The third bullet I think was parietal lobe and I’m pretty sure it has to do with planning (I may be wrong)</p>
@ericpanda</p>
But if you consult wikipedia for Dichotic Listening:
“During a standard dichotic listening test, a participant is simultaneously presented with two different auditory stimuli (usually speech) separately to each ear over headphones.[2] Participants are asked to distinguish/identify one or (in a divided-attention experiment) both of the stimuli.”</p>
:/</p>
@meatkabob to be honest I didn’t even see the dichotic memory answer. I didn’t even know what it was until I came to this thread but from what I read it seems that DM has more to do with the difference thresholds of two stimuli rather than being able to zone in on a particular stimulus.</p>
can anyone confirm wat the gender role one was?</p>
or do you think the AP psych exam curve won’t be lenient, because college board wants to stop people from getting so many 4’s and 5’s on this exam?</p>
For gender role, I put that it begins in early childhood but I’m really not sure.</p>
and yeah i thought the frq was really weird… the placement? for a lot of them it hardly applies. Also i didn’t get prospective memory and just guessed… wat was the answer to the proximity and perception one in frq? cause u can interpret it as gestalt principal or as proximity as in closeness in ur vision field…</p>
- anyone else confirm gender role? </p>
<ol>
<li>For the question…" which of the following characteristic of sensorimotor stage."
Was the answer something like “didn’t realize that the cup was actually taller rather than wider” (something that had to do with not obtaining conversion yet?</li>
</ol>
For 2 that was right. They don’t learn object permanence until the next stage.</p>