Board
Board
Board
Some clinical genetic diseases in humans are disorders transmitted in patterns that can be
predicted from knowledge of how genetic information is transmitted to offspring during meiosis
(Mendel's Law). Which of the following statements is true regarding psychiatric disorders?
A. They have etiological homogeneity.
B. They have well-defined phenotypes.
C. They have reproducibly associated chromosomal rearrangement syndromes.
D. They have clear-cut inheritance patterns.
E. They will be easier to understand based on the findings of the Human Genome Project
2. Which of the following personality disorders shows evidence of genetic transmission, on the basis of
family risk, twin, and molecular studies?
A. Antisocial.
B. Avoidant.
C. Borderline.
D. Dependent.
E. Schizotypal
5. ∆Regarding the physical layout of an interview room, the psychiatrist should attend to all of the
following except
A. Chairs for patient and physician should be of equal height.
B. There should be a desk between patient and physician for appropriate therapeutic distance.
C. A playroom is advised for interactions with children.
D. In the emergency room, the physician should have quick access to the door.
E. Extraneous noise should be minimized or avoided.
6. The behavior of a patient who remains silent during an interview illustrates which type of
resistance?
A. Conscious.
B. Ego.
C. Id.
D. Superego.
E. Countertransference.
7. After listening to several examples of similar behavior in the patient's life story, the psychiatrist
offers the observation "When you can't perform up to your own high standards, you appear to act to
try to please someone else." This response by the psychiatrist is an example of
A. Reflection.
B. Interpretation.
C. Transition.
D. Self-disclosure.
E. Facilitation.
A. Derealization.
B. Illusion.
C. Depersonalization.
D. Delusion.
E. Hallucination.
9. After fully exploring the patient's personal history, the psychiatrist proceeds to the next history
item by asking, "Is there a family history of psychiatric illness, for example, suicidal behavior, mental
retardation, or anxiety, mood, psychotic, substance abuse, or personality disorder?" This would be an
example of
10. Regarding physician contacts with the patient's relatives or friends, the physician should generally
11. When interviewing a depressed or suicidal patient, the psychiatrist is advised to do all of the
following except
12. On mental status examination, the patient's stream of thought reveals a lack of goal directedness,
excessive details, and difficulty with closure. This thought pattern is called
A. Circumstantiality.
B. Tangentiality.
C. Thought blocking.
D. Perseveration.
E. Neologism.
13. ∆Delusions that cannot be understood by other psychological processes are referred to as primary
delusions. Which of the following is an example of this type of delusion?
A. Poverty.
B. Nihilism.
C. Thought insertion.
D. Persecution.
E. Guilt.
Gent
A. Have led to biological tests for the presence or absence of a clinical disorder.
B. Imply that genetic linkage studies will be less difficult as a result of the diagnostic precision in our
field.
C. Have not included genes responsible for complex psychiatric disorders.
D. Include a mutation rate in males that is twice as high as that in females.
E. Include discovery of more than 200,000 total genes, more than was expected.
15. A 24-year-old woman with no history of medical or psychiatric disorders sought help in the
psychiatric outpatient clinic for anxiety related to her mother's cancer treatment. Her mother
eventually went into remission, and the patient terminated treatment; however, a few months later
she recontacted the clinic, reporting that she had experienced more anxiety while participating in a
clinical trial as a healthy subject. The research trial involved administration of cholecystokinin. This
woman is at risk for which of the following disorders?
A. Bipolar disorder.
B. Depression.
C. General anxiety disorder.
D. Panic disorder.
E. Posttraumatic stress disorder.
16. A methodological limitation of adoption research, in terms of its ability to separate genetic from
environmental influences, is the fact that
17. Sigmund Freud's hierarchy of threats during early childhood are experienced in which of the
following sequences?
A. Helplessness, separation, castration anxiety, punishment by guilt.
B. Separation, helplessness, annihilation, castration anxiety.
C. Annihilation, separation, castration anxiety, punishment by guilt.
D. Separation, helplessness, punishment by guilt, castration anxiety.
E. Helplessness, separation, annihilation, punishment by guilt.
18. Rene Spitz's genetic field theory specifies the appearance of three "organizers" in which
developmental sequence?
20. Arnold Gesell's cross-sectional scheme describes the development of behavior across all of the
following sectors except
A. Motor.
B. Adaptive.
C. Language.
D. Affective.
E. Personal–social
21. John Bowlby's five "components" of attachment behavior (as opposed to responses to separation)
include
25. ∆ Ainsworth's "strange situation procedure" is used to assess the quality of attachment. Which of
the following describes a securely attached child?
A. Mild protest with mother's departure, seeks mother upon her return, easily placated by mother.
B. Mild protest with mother's departure, no approach to mother upon her return.
C. No protest on mother's departure, no approach to mother upon her return.
D. Marked upset with mother's departure, readily accepts mother's effort to comfort upon her return.
E. Indifference to mother's departure, rejection of mother on her return.
26. Regarding Offer and Offer's study of adolescent development, the three specified developmental
routes are
27. A husband and wife frequently engage in unproductive arguments. Even when the couple
converses without arguing, the husband reveals little about his past relationships, and what he does
divulge comes out a bit disorganized. Particularly frustrating to the wife is the husband's practice,
during the couple's arguments, of talking in a nonlinear, general fashion, accusing her of doing
everything "wrong," just like his mother. According to the topographical model of the mind, which of
the following is true about the husband in this example?
28. A husband is plagued by feelings of incompetence. When he comes home, he scans the house for
any sign that it is his wife and not himself who is incompetent. He attacks her on flimsy pretexts,
assuming the role of self-righteously competent spouse saddled with an incompetent wife. Not only
does the wife feel attacked and upset, she also believes that she is incompetent, even though others
disagree with her self-assessment. The psychological defense or process illustrated in this example is
A. Denial.
B. Projection.
C. Projective identification.
D. Reversal.
E. Undoing.
30. Hunger is an example of a patient's drive to bond with another person, according to which theory
of the mind?
A. Self psychology.
B. Object relations.
C. Classical structural.
D. Topographical.
E. Psychosexual.
31. A 44-year-old woman in outpatient psychodynamic psychotherapy is discussing a dream she had
the night before. The psychotherapist engages the patient in a discussion about the dream's mystical
and cross-cultural aspects, in accordance with a leading theory which postulates that a common set of
ideas, symbols, and images are shared by all humankind. This psychotherapy is likely based on the
work of
A. Adler.
B. Horney.
C. Jung.
D. Rank.
E. Sullivan.
A. Chest X ray.
B. Electrocardiogram.
C. Complete blood count.
D. Magnetic resonance imaging scan.
E. Serum vitamin B12 and folate levels.
34. ∆Prior to starting a patient on lithium carbonate, the psychiatrist should order which of the
following tests?
A. Reticulocyte count.
B. Platelet count.
C. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate.
D. Liver function tests.
E. Thyroid function tests.
35. ∆A single, 53-year-old man is found lying on the floor in his apartment, having apparently lost
consciousness. In the emergency room, he is alert, appears oriented, and reports no complaints;
however, he has a large bruise on the left side of his head above the ear. He is admitted overnight for
observation and in the morning is noted to be lethargic and disoriented, despite having taken no
medications. Which of the following tests would be contraindicated?
A. Carotid ultrasound.
B. Computed tomography.
C. Electroencephalogram.
D. Lumbar puncture.
E. Magnetic resonance imaging.
36. Research advantages of functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) over positron emission
tomography (PET), single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT), and regional cortical blood
flow (rCBF) studies include all of the following except
37. Clinical scales on the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory–2 include all of the following
except
A. Hypochondriasis.
B. Hysteria.
C. Lie.
D. Psychopathic deviance.
E. Psychasthenia.
38. Psychometric testing instruments notable for their value in assessment of a wide variety of
symptom patterns include all of the following except
41. Screening instruments that may be administered rapidly for prompt and efficient assessment of
personality in a managed care system include all of the following except
42. Instruments used for the assessment of psychodynamics and patient enabling factors include all
of the following except
A. Rorschach.
B. Thematic Apperception Test (TAT).
C. Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory–2 (MMPI-2).
D. Social Adjustment Scale—Self-Report (SAS-SR).
E. Millon Clinical Multiaxial Inventory—III (MCMI-III).
43. A 49-year-old Korean Woman recently immigrated to the United States. She understands
very little English and is having difficulty making friends in her neighborhood. As a result of
childhood trauma, she finds it hard to experience intimacy in serious relationships. She has a
significant family history of depression. In the Biopsychosocial model, which of the following
would be considered a socio-cultural factor:
A. Her medical history
B. Her aversion to intimacy after childhood trauma
C. Her age and gender
D. Her family history of depression
E. *Her difficulties assimilating into a new culture
44. While cross-examining a female defense witness, a male attorney becomes annoyed. The
witness remains calm. The attorney grows more frustrated, then accuses the witness of being
defensive and asks why she is so angry with him. This reattribution of one’s own emotion onto
another is an example of:
A. Transference
B. Countertransference
C. *Projection
D. Displacement
E. Reaction Formation
47. According to John Bowlby and theories of attachment, which of the following statements is
TRUE:
A. Attachment occurs only to animate objects
B. Abusive parenting prevents attachment between mother and child
C. Children with normal attachment to their parents don’t experience a fear of darkness
D. *Failure to achieve attachment can lead to difficulties with trusting others
E. The terms “bonding” and “attachment” are synonymous
48. A teenager has a “gut”, strong reaction to a mild reprimand by her boss at “Pizza World”.
Adult employees, who receive the same admonishment, have a much milder reaction. This
differential adolescent reaction is consistent with functional imaging studies that demonstrate:
A. *Greater activity in the amygdala of teens
B. Greater activity in the frontal lobes of teens
C. Greater activity in the nucleus accumbens of teens
D. Decreased activity in the cerebellum of teens
E. Decreased activity in the hippocampus of teens
49. According to Erikson, the period of Young Adulthood is marked by a shift towards:
A. *Intimacy, prompted by loneliness and an absence of committed love
B. Identity, prompted by a move away from the family of origin
C. Role Confusion, prompted by a desire to explore sexual orientation
D. Industry, prompted by a need for productivity at work
E. Generativity, prompted by a need for productivity at work
50. After being given the news that he has only hours to live, a man becomes angry with his
physician and refuses to pay his bill, claiming the physician is incompetent. According to
Kubler-Ross, this reaction typically (but not always) appears at which stage in the Grieving
Process:
A. 1st Stage
B. *2nd Stage
C. 3rd Stage
D. 4th Stage
E. 5th Stage
51. An 85-year-old woman is admitted to the ICU after a hip fracture. She is found to be
incompetent. She is widowed and has 2 living children and a younger brother. Her children
want her to undergo a hip-replacement surgery. Her brother, and his son (her nephew) are
opposed to the procedure. Whose wishes should be honored according to proxy statutes?
A. Her brother
B. *Her children
C. Her nephew
D. Her spouse
E. Her pastor
A. drive*
B. instinct
C. will
D. motivation
E. need
A. perseveration
B. stupor
C. stereotypy*
D. vorbeireden
E. mitmachen
54. Movement of body in response to light pressure until the movement is halted is called:
A. parakinesia
B. Mitgehen*
C. blocking
D. waxy flexibility
E. negativism
A. apathy
B. blunted affect*
C. dissociation
D. flattened affect
E. incongruity
56. Asymbolia is :
A. inability to write
B. inability to read
C. inability to recognize mathematical symbols
D. inability to recognize writing*
E. both A and B
A. alogia*
B. dysphonia
C. logoclonia
D. paralogia
E. agrammatism
58. Vorbereiden is also known as:
A. logoclonia
B. coprolalia
C. talking past the point*
D. paralogia
E. schizophasia
A. schizophrenia
B. Ganser syndrome*
C. depression
D. delusional disorder
E. schizotypal personality disorder
A. nihilism*
B. reference
C. persecution
D. love
E. infestation
61. The core features of catatonia include all the following EXCEPT:
A. posturing
B. stereotypies
C. waxy flexibility
D. delusions*
E. ambitendence
A. logoclonia*
B. echolalia
C. dysarthria
D. logorrhea
E. flight of idea
65. Which of the following statistical tests is most appropriately used to evaluate differences
among mean depressive total scores of women in three different depressive groups?
A. dependent t-test
B. chi-square test
C. analysis of variance*
D. independent t-test
E. Fisher’s exact test
66. .In a cohort study, the ratio of the incidence rate of mortality among women who suffer
from depression to the incidence rate of mortality among women without depression is the
A. attributable risk
B. odds-risk ratio
C. incidence rate
D. prevalence ratio
E. relative risk*
67 . To estimate the relative risk in a case-control study, which of the following is calculated?
A. attributable risk
B. odds-risk ratio*
C. incidence rate
D. prevalence ratio
E. sensitivity
68 Questions that inform the physician about the cultural context of a patient’s
illness narrative were developed and championed by ∆ Clean Champion ∆
A. Hans Selye
B. Walter Cannon
C. John Bowlby
D. Arthur Kleinman*
E. Sigmunf Freud
71. The Porteus Maze test (tracing the path out of a maze without reversing your
direction, crossing a line or lifting your pencil) is used to assess which
cognitive operation?
A. Reasoning*
B. Memory
C. Attention
D. Arousal
E. Concentration
72. Which of the following might be expected in someone with damage to the
basal-orbital frontal cortex?
A. Anterograde amnesia
B. Impulsivity*
C. Apathy
D. Blindsight
E. Retrograde amnesia
73. Anton Mesmer modeled his explanation of what we would today call hypnosis on
the pioneering work of:
A. Charcot
B. James
C. Newton*
D. Gallileo
E. Kraepelin
75. Your genotype most directly shapes the environment you are exposed to at
what age?
A. Birth
B. Latency years (pre-pubertal)
C. Teen years
D. Adulthood*
E. Toddler years
84. Which of the following abnormalities are observed in sleep studies of many
depressed persons?
A. Reduced REM latency
B. Decreased REM activity and density
C. Increased REM as a percent of total sleep time
D. Shortening of the 1st REM episode
E. A&C*
86. Exhaustion of the adrenal cortex due to chronic stimulation is most likely
to underlie
A. Conditioned fear
B. Stress analgesia
C. Autoimmune illness*
D. Stress-induced alcohol abuse
E. Stimulus generalization
(A) symbolism
(B) repression
(C) free association*
(D) primary process
(E) examination of the preconscious
94. All of the following statements about defense mechanisms are true EXCEPT
95. ∆The defense mechanism used when unacceptable feelings are prevented from reaching
awareness is known as
(A) Repression*
(B) regression
(C) displacement
(D) rationalization
(E) isolation of affect
96. ∆A previously toilet-trained child is hospitalized and begins wetting the bed again. This is
an example of
98. A patient’s reexperiencing of feelings about the parent with the therapist during
psychoanalysis is known as
(A) interference
(B) resistance
(C) association
(D) transference*
(E) cognitive dissonance
100. The 60% monozygotic twin concordance for schizophrenia is evidence for the role of
(A) heredity
(B) environment
(C) either A or B in different studies
(D) both A and B at the same time*
(E) neither A nor B
(A) thinking*
(B) perception
(C) attention
(D) fantasy
(E) memorization
102. All of the following would be considered symptoms of mental illness except:
A. Loss of interest
B. Poor sleep
C. Thoughts of death
D. Psychomotor retardation*
E. Poor concentration
103. Which psychiatric conditions have been proposed to be classified from a dimensional
rather than a categorical perspective?
A. Personality disorders*
B. Psychotic disorders
C. Dementias
D. Sleep disorders
E. Mood disorders
A. Diabetes*
B. Major depression
C. Borderline personality disorder
D. Obsessive-compulsive disorder
E. Obsessive-compulsive personality disorder
108. Which of the following statements about graded synaptic potentials is TRUE:
A. Is a potential space located between the periosteum and the dura mater*
B. Is a potential space that may fill with blood and cause hydrocephalus
C. Contains cerebrospinal fluid
D. Is a potential space located between the dura and arachnoid mater
E. A and C
113. The normal distribution, or normal curvet has the following properties EXCEPT:
A. it is bimodal*
B. it is continuous
C. it is symmetrical about its mean
D. the mean, median, and mode are all equal
E. the area under the curve is one
A. sample size
B. size of effect
C. reliability of your measures
D. adopted significance level
E. power can be increased by increasing B. and D*.
115. The following are true regarding non-parametric methods EXCEPT:
A. Median
B. Quartiles
C. Percentiles
D. Proportions*
E. Mean
A. convergent validity
B. divergent validity
C. incremental validity*
D. criterion validity
E. concurrent validity
118. An observer error, which arises in data collection when there is carryover
from one judgment to another is called:
A. halo effect*
B. size effect
C. Hawthorne effect
D. Validity effect
E. Statistical effect
120. Designs in which patients are used as their own controls are called:
A. open label design
B. cross-over design
C. double blind design
D. single blind design
E. all of the above
A. t test
B. Chi squared test*
C. ANOVA
D. Pearson Moment Correlation
E. Simple Linear Regression
123. Functions of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) include all the following
EXCEPT::
A. perceptual judgment
B. memory
C. programming and planning sequences of behavior
D. writing regulation*
E. Problem solving
124. ∆Frontal lobe syndrome (personality change) is characterized by all the following
EXCEPT:
A. disinhibition
B. increased social and ethical control*
C. sexual indiscretions
D. poor judgment
E. elevated mood (fatuous euphoria)
125. left-sided lesions (affecting the arcuate fasciculus) of the inferior parietal lobule
results in all the following EXCEPT :
A. sensory aphasia * temporal
B. tactile agnosia
C. dysphasia
D. right-left disorientation
E. finger agnosia (can be elicited by the ‘In-Between Test’)
145. The following statements about the distribution of neurotransmitters are correct
EXCEPT one:
147. Regarding benzodiazepines (BZDs) all the following are true EXCEPT: trickcyclist
149. Factors associated with dependence and withdrawal problems include all the following
EXCEPT:
152. Regarding Tricyclic Antidepressants (TCAs), all the following are true EXCEPT:
TCA
A. Treatment results in subsensitivity of NA and 5-HT receptors on cell bodies
B. Tertiary amines have a higher affinity for the 5-HT uptake site
C. Tertiary amines are more sedating
D. Secondary amines have more anticholinergic side effects*
E. Tertiary amines have a quicker peak plasma level
A. Sinus bradycardia*
B. Impairment of memory
C. Postural hypotension due to alpha-1 adrenoceptor antagonism
D. Weight gain due to histamine H1 antagonism
E. Negative inotropism
155. Common side effects of SSRIs include all the following EXCEPT:
A. Diarrhoea
B. Constipation
C. Loss of appetite
D. Weight gain*
E. Tremor
158. Recognized side effects of MAOIs include all the following EXCEPT:
A. Mania
B. Seizures
C. Blurred vision
D. Peripheral neuropathy
E. Alopecia*
A. Is sedating
B. Has 5-HT agonist properties
C. Should be taken with food
D. Can cause priapism
E. Has no effect on cognitive function*
A. Is an SNRI
B. Lacks anticholinergic effects
C. Has an effect on the seizure threshold
D. Can be given with MAOIs*
E. Can cause hypotension
165. Recognized side effects of antipsychotics include all the following EXCEPT:
A. Retinal pigmentation
B. Leucocytosis*
C. Prolonged QT interval
D. Weight gain
E. Torsade de pointes
166. Regarding neuroleptic malignant syndrome, one is true:
A. Onset occurs after 1-2 months of treatment
B. Onset is slow and insidious
C. Symptoms include hypotonicity,
D. Mortality is 50 %
E. Secondary conditions include thromboembolism, renal failure, and cardiovascular collapse*
167. One of the following is false regarding Risperidone:
A. Has high affinity for the 5-HT2A receptor
B. Can cause hyperprolacinaemia
C. Weight loss is frequent*
D. Is as effective as conventional antipsychotics (at least)
E. Headache and anxiety may occur
168. All the following are true regarding Clozapine EXCEPT:
A. Has low affinity for D2 receptors
B. Has high affinity for D1 and D4 receptors
C. Has few effects on adrenoceptors*
D. Can increase blood levels of warfarin and digoxin
E. Metabolism by the cytochrome P450 system is not significant
169. Side effects of Clozapine include all the following EXCEPT:
A. Bradycardia*
B. Weight gain
C. Hypersalivation
D. Decrease in seizure threshold
E. Neutropenia and agranulocytosis
170. One is true regarding Olanzapine:
A. Has lower affinity for the D2 and 5-HT2A receptors than Clozapine
B. Has higher affinity for the D1 receptor than Clozapine
C. Causes negligible weight gain
D. Has high levels of Extra-pyramidal side effects
E. Can cause marked sedation*
A. Splitting
B. Poor impulse control
C. Euphoric affect*
D. Primitive idealization
E. Feelings of emptiness
174. Somatic symptoms of severe anxiety include all the following EXCEPT:
A. Impotence
B. Diarrhoea
C. Constipation
D. Hypoventilation*
E. Sighing
175. All the following are true regarding Autochthonous delusions EXCEPT:
A. Synonymous with primary delusions
B. Rarely preceded by a delusional atmosphere*
C. A source of secondary delusions
D. Can occur in schizophrenia
E. 'Brain waves'
176. ∆experiences include all the following EXCEPT:
A. Jamais vu
B. Delusional perception*
C. Derealization
D. Visual illusions
E. Deja-vecu
177. All the following are true regarding Dissociative states EXCEPT: TCA
A. Occur in hysteria
B. May be seen under hypnosis
C. Include fugue states
D. Exclude multiple personalities*
E. Are seen in conversion disorder
178. Formal thought disorder includes all the following EXCEPT:
A. Drivelling
B. Conversion*
C. Flight of ideas
D. Perseveration
E. Transitory thinking
179. ∆One is true regarding Concrete thinking:
A. Is diagnostic of schizophrenia
B. Is diagnostic of organic brain disease
C. May occur in manic-depressive psychosis
D. Is a defect of conceptual abstract thought*
E. Is tested by 7,s serial test
180. ∆ One is False regarding Formication: TCA
185. all the following are true regarding Autosomal Dominant EXCEPT:
A. the phenotypic trait is present in all individuals carrying the dominant allele
B. the phenotypic trait does not skip generations – vertical transmission takes place
C. males and females are affected
D. male to male transmission can take place
E. transmission is solely dependent on parental consanguineous matings*
A. interphase
B. prophase
C. metaphase
D. anaphase
E. telophase*
188. All the following are true regarding X-linked recessive EXCEPT:
191. Features of cerebellar disease include all the following EXCEPT: TCA
A. Pendular nystagmu *
B. Dysdiadochokinesis T
C. Intentional tremor F
D. Past pointing T
E. Scanning dysarthria
192. Causes of pre-senile dementia include all the following EXCEPT : TCA
A. Jakob-Creutzfeldt disease T
B. Simple schizophrenia*
C. Subacute spongiform encephalopathy T
D. Alcoholism F
E. Punch-drunk syndrome
193. Components of the Papez circuit include all the following EXCEPT: TCA
A. Fornix T
B. Mamillary body T
C. Hippocampus T
D. Locus cereleous*
E. Cingulate gyrus
194. Functions of the limbic system may include all the following EXCEPT:
A. Emotional behaviour T
B. Motivation T
C. Sexual activity T
D. Logical reasoning* T
E. Memory
195. Principal outputs of the basal ganglia go to all the following EXCEPT:
A. Cerebral cortex* F
B. Red nucleus T
C. Tectum T
D. Subthalamic nucleus T
E. Substantia nigra T
196. Diplopia occurs in:
A. Neuropathy of oculomotor nerve* T
B. Parkinson’s disease F
C. Neuropathy of facial nerve F
D. Huntington’s disease F
E. Diabetes insipidus
198. Functions of the non-dominant cerebral hemisphere may include all the following
EXCEPT:
A. Holistic T
B. Ideational* F
C. Pictorial T
D. Geometric T
E. Non-linear
200. Features of Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease include all the following EXCEPT: TCA
A. Neuronal degeneration T
B. Atrophy of caudate and putamen especially* F
C. Spongeiform changes T
D. Does affect the whole CNS F
E. Glial proliferation T
F
1. All the following are true regarding the Preoperational stage EXCEPT:
A. early adulthood*
B. middle adulthood
C. old age
D. adolescence
E. none of the above
A. regular rhythmicity
B. positive approaches to new situations
C. rapid, positive adaptability to change or novelty
D. mild intensity of emotional reaction
E. adapt slowly and do not tolerate disappointment*
5. Authoritarian parents
11. When an organism has been accidentally reinforced after some behavior so the behavior
increases, but the reinforcement does not actually depend on the behavior at all, the result is
A. conditional neurosis.
B. spontaneous recovery.
C. superstitious behavior.*
D. unconditional reinforcement
E. discriminant response
12. In general, reinforcers and punishers are more effective if they are delivered
A. after some delay.
B. immediately after the behavior*.
C. before the desired behavior.
D. no matter what the organism does.
E. after long delay
13. The developing brain of a baby is especially sensitive to damage from outside influences
during what period of time?
A. The first three months
B. The fourth and fifth months
C. Right before birth
D. Up until age 2*
E. Right after birth
14. In Schacter and Singer's study on emotions, in which they injected volunteers with adrenaline
to trigger physiological arousal, what determined WHICH emotion each person experienced?
A. How much adrenaline was injected
B. Whether the volunteer was male or female
C. The type of physiological arousal that was triggered
D. The situation in which the volunteer was placed*
E. The temperament of the volunteer
15. According to the humanistic motivation theory of Abraham Maslow, self-actualized people
are
A. realistic, spiritual, and unconventional.*
B. self-centered, selfish, and egocentric.
C. introverted, withdrawn, and isolated.
D. hard-working, tense, and achievement-oriented
E. extroverted, unrealistic, and extravagant
17. According to the text, what is the relationship between creativity and intelligence?
A. This question has never really been studied.
B. There is no firm relationship between creativity and IQ.*
C. Creative people are more intelligent than others.
D. Creative people are less intelligent than others.
E. Creative people are always genius
18. According to Jung, our myths and dreams are full of archetypes, which are
A. the unique, individual symbols of our unconscious minds.
B. the three aspects of the personality: id, ego, and superego.
C. inherited ideas and symbols that are common to all people*.
D. the lower level needs in the hierarchy of motivation
F. the higher level needs in the hierarchy of motivation
19.What is the best approach that a physician can take with a hostile
patient who is hospitalized?
a. offer straightforward explanations of procedures*
b. be sympathetic about the patient's fears
c. set firm limits on the patient's behavior
d. avoid isolating the patient
e. let the patient share in the treatment decisions
22. The side effect that is least likely to be caused by fluoxetine (Prozac)
is:
a. orgasmic dysfunction
b. insomnia
c. nausea
d. fatigue
e. constipation*
28.Possible signs of posterior column damage include all the following EXCEPT:
A. Positive rombergism F
B. Diminished tendon reflexes T
C. Hypertonicity* F
D. Loss of vibration sense T
E. Loss of proprioception T
29.Features of upper motor neuron lesions could include all the following EXCEPT:
TCA
A. Clonus T
B. Cogwheel rigidity* F
C. Extensor plantar response F
D. Preservation of muscle bulk T
E. Increased tendon reflexes
T
30.Features of multi-infarct dementia include all the following EXCEPT:
A. A. Neurofibrillary tangles* F
B. B Hypertension T
C. C. Cerebral ischaemia T
D. D Cerebral infarction
E. T
31.The limbic system includes all the following EXCEPT
A. Parahippocampal gyrus T
B. Hypothalamus T
C. Corpus callosum* F
D. Anterior nucleus of thalamus T
E. Subcallosal gyrus
A. Astereognosis.
B. Dressing apraxia.
C. Acalculia.
D. Ideomotor apraxia.
E. Aphasia*.
38. Parasympathetic stimulation causes all the following EXCEPT:
A. Paracetamol.
B. Cimetidine.
C. Procyclidine.
D. Dothiepin.
E. Methylcellulose*.
42.Woman with agoraphobia improves with repeated exposure to crowds. Which one of the
following is the essential psychological process involved?
a) distraction
b) extinction *
c) instrumental conditioning
d) massed practice
e) selective abstraction
43. A patient asks you about a recent newspaper report on the neuregulin-1 gene and psychiatric
disorder. You explain to her that the most likely psychiatric link is with which one of the
following disorders?
a) Anorexia Nervosa
b) Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD)
c) Bulimia Nervosa
d) Major Depressive Disorder
e) Schizophrenia *
44. You are teaching medical students about the differences between physiological Prion protein
and pathological Prions which lead to the development of variant Creutzeld-Jakob disease.
Which one of the following would you tell them about PrPsc (Prion Protein Scrapie)? It has a:
a) amino acid sequencing difference
b) bovine origin
c) covalent bond difference from PrPc (normal Prion protein)
d) higher beta sheet content *
e) origin from infected blood
A. learning disability
B. dementia
C. head injury
D. Tourette’s syndrome
E. all of the above*
46 . Definition of a delusion includes all the following EXCEPT:
47 . All the following are true regarding Delusional intuition (autochthonous) EXCEPT:
(A) judgment by “experts” that the items that make up a test “make sense”
(B) judgment that the items that make up a test cover the domain of knowledge relevant for the test’s
purposes
(C) comparison of a test to another established test*
(D) the number of true cases who are detected by a test instrument
(E) the ability of a test to predict who will develop the disorder at some point in time in the future
52. Which of the following epidemiological methods is primarily concerned with assessing the
effect of preventive or therapeutic interventions designed to alter the development or outcome
of illness?
53. Which of the following statistical indices provides a measure of agreement between clinicians,
correcting for chance variance?
(A) Spearman’s r
(B) the kappa statistic*
(C) Cohen’s beta statistic
(D) the mu statistic
(E) the F statistic
55. Which of the following cells is reponsible for myelin formation in the peripheral
nervous system?
a. Astrocyte
b. Oligodendrocyte
c. Schwann cell *
d. Microglial cell
e. Satellite cell
56. A neuron with many short dendrites and a single long axon is a:
A. Multipolar neuron *
B. Bipolar neuron
C. Unipolar neuron
D. None of the above
57. An inhibitory neuron could affect the neuron with which it synapses by:
58. Which of the following organelles is responsible for the appearance of Nissl bodies
in the cell bodies of motor neurons?
a. Smooth endoplasmic reticulum
b. Rough endoplasmic reticulum *
c. Golgi apparatus
d. Mitochondria
e. Basal bodies
10. All the following are types of cognitive distortion in depression EXCEPT:
a. Arbitrary inference
b. Over-generalization
c. Selective abstraction
d. Body image distortion*
e. Minimization and magnification
11. All the following statements about suicide are correct EXCEPT:
a. Most people who commit suicide are depressed
b. Suicide is the first leading cause of death in adolescents*
c. 75% of people with depression can be successfully treated
d. Completed suicide is more common in men than in women
e. Suicide among those with depressive disorders can exceed 15%
12. ∆Which of the following is NOT a feature of mania?
a. Over-activity
b. Hyposexuality*
c. Elation of mood
d. Over-talkativeness
e. Grandiose delusions
17. According to cognitive dissonance theory the following factors increase dissonance
except:
a. Low pressure to comply
b. Increased perceived choice of options
c. Awareness of responsibility for consequences
d. Change behavior*
e. Expected unpleasant consequence of behavior to others
a.high status
b.High competence
c.High social power
d.Some characteristics in common with the observer
e.High self esteem and high confidence of the observer enhances perception of these
characters*
20.Which one of the following factors has no effect on the social learning theory?
a. Cognitive appraisal
b. Cognitive dissonance*
c. Inference
d. Goal seeking
e. . Affiliation
A. Gene effect
B. Limbic function
C. Biochemical factors
D. Social learning factors *
E. Chemical neurotransmission
27. Which one of the following is a component in stage theory of behavioural change?
A. Consciousness raising*
B. Self de-evaluation
C. Stimulus-response
D. Conditioning
E. Reversibility
28.The following statements concerning theories of behavior change are correct Except:
A. Social psychological theories are concerned with how events and experiences external to
a person influence his behavior
B. Social cognitive approaches give a role for social learning on behavior change
C. Self-efficacy is derived from social learning theory
D. Cognitive behavior theories stress the role of social learning techniques *
E. Learning theories form a basis for behavioral change
29. Which one of the following is considered in personality theory of behavior change?
A. Physical environment
B. Individual traits *
C. Social environment
D. Economic environment
E. Previous experiences
A. Anhedonia
B. Overvalued idea
C. Impaired reality testing *
D. Objective ability to evaluate and judge the world outside the self
E. Social withdrawal
A. Hallucinations
B. Delusions
C. Abnormal indulgence in philosophical matters *
D. Formal thought disorder
E. Over indulgence in social activities
A. Learning factor
B. Social influences
C. Psychological influences
D. Growth and developmental factors *
E. Sociocultural factors
A. Acetyl choline
B. Valproate *
C. Dopamine
D. Norepinephrine
E. Serotonin
A. Perikaryon
B. Presynaptic membrane
C. Postsynaptic membrane
D. Amygdaloid *
E. Synaptic cleft
39. Adjustment to social regulations without the loss of too much independence occurs at
what stage of erikson’s eight stage of man:
A. intiative vs guilt
B. autonomy vs shame*
C. trust vs mistrust
D. industry vs inferiority
E. identity vs confusion
A. adolescence
B. middle adulthood
C. early adulthood*
D. old age
E. both A and B
41. According to Kohlberg, rules are obeyed to avoid punishment is a feature of:
A. 2 months
B. 10 months
C. 6 months*
D. 12 months
E. 14 – 18 months
A. Sensorimotor stage
B. preoperational stage
C. Concrete stage*
D. Formal operational stage
E. Both A and B
A. responsive
B. warm
C. child-centered
D. children of such parents tend to be independent
E. children from this category may be more aggressive*
A. cohort study
B. cross-sectional study
C. historical cohort study
D. case-control study
E. clinical treatment trial
A. schizophrenia
B. temporal lobe epilepsy
C. lithium carbonate
D. disulfiram therapy
E. citalopram therapy *
A. is an awareness of oneself as being both outside alongside, and inside oneself
B. is the subjective phenomenon of doubling
C. it is cognitive and ideational, rather than perceptual
D. often a variety of depersonalization
E. occur only in abnormal people*
57. Passivity Phenomena does not include:
A. Thought rumination*
B. Thought broadcasting
C. ‘Made actions’
D. Passivity of emotion
E. Passivity of Impulse
58. The most common form of abnormal expression of emotion in pseudobubar palsy
A. Fatuous affectal
B. Dissociation of affect
C. Emotional indifference
D. Emotional incontinence*.
E. Perplexity
____ 1. Utilizing a variety of theoretical approaches rather than a single approach is referred to as:
a. the humanistic approach
b. the eclectic approach*
c. the nativist approach
d. the behaviorist approach
____ 20. One of the key functions associated with the parietal lobes is:
a. initiation of voluntary muscle movements
b. processing of auditory information
c. processing of visual information
d. processing of neural signals related to touch*
____ 21. The part of the neuron that stores neurotransmitters is the:
a. terminal buttons*
b. Dendrites
c. Soma
d. Axon
____ 22. A hypothesis:
a. is a conclusion based on the results of a research study
b. is not necessary if the scientific method is being used
c. normally wouldn't be generated until a study has been completed
d. is a prediction about the characteristics of a behavior under investigation*
____
____ 24. Within the forebrain, the structure that plays an important role in the regulation of eating, drinking, body
temperature, and sexual behavior is the:
a. Thalamus
b. Medulla
c. Tectum
d. Hypothalamus*
____ 25. Glial cells are the cells in the nervous system that: ∆ Glial cells Garbage remover ∆
a. remove waste and help neurons communicate more efficiently*
b. make the initial contact with the environment
c. convey information from one internal processing site to another
d. carry messages and commands away from the brain and spinal cord
____ 26. Early studies of brain damage indicated that patients who lacked the ability to easily understand spoken
language often had damage to:
a. an area known as Broca's area
b. the right side of the brain
c. an area known as Wernicke's area*
d. the cerebellum
____ 27. Any uncontrolled variable that changes systematically with the independent variable is:
a. a dependent variable
b. a correlation coefficient
c. a theoretical construct
d. a confounding تائهvariable*
____ 28. The key function associated with the cerebellum is:
a. control of basic life support functions (such as heart rate and breathing)
b. control of motivation and emotional responses
c. speech production and speech comprehension
d. coordination of complex motor skills*
____
____ 29. Both sodium and potassium ions:
a. carry a negative charge
b. carry a positive charge*
c. are concentrated outside the neuron's cell body
d. are concentrated inside the neuron's cell body
____ 30. Action potentials:
a. are stronger when the incoming stimulation is more intense
b. are seldom strong enough to reach the terminal buttons
c. travel more slowly if the incoming stimulation is less intense
d. are generated in an all-or-none fashion*
____
____ 31. One of the key functions of the amygdala is:
a. the control of motivational and emotional behaviors*
b. acting as an important gathering point for sensory input
c. the regulation of eating, drinking, and sexual behavior
d. acting as a gateway into long-term memory
____
____ 32. Within the hindbrain, the structure that is linked to the control of general arousal is the:
a. Amygdala
b. Cerebellum
c. substantia nigra
d. reticular formation*
____ ____
A. Insula*
B. Fornix
C. Cingulum
D. Hippocampus
E. Amygdala
A. Clasp-knife rigidity*
B. Tremor of the lips ?
C. Spasmodic torticollis
D. Akathisia
E. Festinant gait
A. Broca's area
B. Hippocampus*
C. Operculum
D. Superior temporal gyrus
E. Cingulum [F for cingular gyrus]
37.The following are associated with disorder of the parietal lob EXCEPT:
A. Gerstmann's syndrome
B. Astereognosis
C. Tactile inattention
D. Dressing apraxia
E. Word blindness*
A. Dentate nucleus*
B. Substantia nigra
C. Red nucleus
D. Hypocampus
E. Globus pallidus
39.Characteristic clinical signs of cerebellar dysfunction include all the following EXCEPT:.
A. ataxia
B. hypertonia*
C. disdiadochokinesia
D. nystagmus
E. intension tremor
40. Characteristic features of Gerstmann's syndrome include all the following EXCEPT:
A. Ophthalmoplegia*
B. Finger agnosia
C. Acalculia
D. Agraphia
E. Left right disorientation
A. acute poliomyelitis
B. cerebral AIDS
C. thoracic spondylosis*
D. Huntingdons Chorea
E. subarachnoid heamorrhage
A. agraphia
B. apathy*
C. memory impairment
D. hypersexuality
E. dyscalculia
44. The following symptom suggests a cortical rather than brain-stem lesion:
A. diplopia
B. vertigo
C. dysarthria
D. dysphasia*
E. dysphagia
45. Unconsciousness can be induced by a small area of damage in one of the following:
A. reticular formation*.
B. cerebral cortex
C. thalamus
D. limbic system
E. internal capsule
A. depressive psychosis
B. cerebellar disorders
C. hypomania
D. widespread disorderes of the brain stem
E. frontal lobe lesions*
48 Recognised features of upper motor neurne lesions of the facial nerve include all the
following EXCEPT:
A. trigeminal neuralgia*
B. sparing of the upper part of the face from paralysis [upper spares upper]
C. paralysis of the muscles of the lower part of the face
D. an apparent abscence of paralysis during involuntary contraction of the muscles of facial
expression
49. The parts visible on the outer surface of an undamaged postmortem brain include the
following EXCEPT :
A. amygdaloid nuclei
B. optic chiasma
C. dura mater
D. trigeminal nerve roots
50. Recognised features of the stimulation of the parasympathetic nervous system include all
the following EXCEPT:
A. penile erection
B. ejaculation
C. pupillary constriction
D. salivation
E. bronchiolar dilatation*
A. DA -agonists.*
B. TRH.
C. 5HT.
D. Stress.
A. Edinger-Westphal.
B. Red nucleus.
C. Para-ventricular*.
D. Amygdala.
E. Caudate nucleus
54. The following are true regarding the reticular activating system EXCEPT:
A. Haloperidol.
B. Amitriptyline.
C. MAOITS.
D. Lithium.
E. BZD*.
57.Drugs effective in the symptomatic treatment of delirium tremens include all the following
EXCEPT:**
A. Ascorbic acid.
B. Amitriptylline*.
C. Haloperidol.
D. Diazepam.
E. Chlormethiazole
A. Haloperidol'
B. Imipramine.
C. Chlorpromazine.
D. Carbamazepine*.
E. Pimozide.
A. Tremor.
B. Pupil dilatation*
C. Increased blood flow to the muscle
D. Stronger heart contraction.
E. Increases melatonin secretion
A. Desipramine*.
B. Trimipramine.
C. Mianserin.
D. Dothiepin.
E. Amitryptylline.
A. Increased neutrophils.
B. Males affected more than the females.
C. Untreated mortality is 20%.
D. Worse with drug holidays*.
E. Caused by D2 receptor blockade.
63.Prolonged administration of lithium carbonate may cause all the following EXCEPT:
A. weight gain
B. craving for carbohydrates*
C. psoriasis like lesions
D. thirst
E. osteoporosis
A. adrenaline*
B. tyrosine
C. phenylalaninine
D. dopamine
E. typotophan
A. T tests*.
B. X2 (chi-squarred)
C. Analysis of variance by ranks
D. Spearman rank]
A. An untreated control
B. Double-blind procedure
C. A valid measure of change*
D. Patient self-reports
E. Physiological measures
A. is high if.the ratiing of the same instrument by different raters using that instrument are
similar
B. concern the reliability of it's measurements
C. means it measures what it is intended to*
D. is high if its measurents accord with those of another instrument supposed to have the
same function
E. is concerned with the reproducibility of its measurements
74. All the following are true regarding double blind trials EXCEPT:
A. Kolmogorov Syndrome
B. Mann Wittney U
C. Wilcoxon
D. ANOVA* ]
E. McNemar
77.The following statements are true of acetylcholine in the nervous system EXCEPT:
2. The cells in the cerebral cortex can be divided into the following basic neuronal types
EXCEPT:
A. pyramidal cells
B. stellate cells (granule cells)
C. multiform (polyform) cells
D. cells of Martinotti
E. vertical cells*
A. Thalamus
B. Epithalamus (inc. pineal gland, and
habenular gland)
C. Hypothalamus (inc. pituitary gland)
D. Subthalamus
E. Tectum*
8. Functions of the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) include all the following
EXCEPT:
A. problem-solving
B. perceptual judgement
C. social behavior*
D. programming and planning sequences of behaviour
E. verbal regulation
A. right-left disorientation
B. finger agnosia
C. dysgraphia
D. dyscalculia
E. dysmnesia*
10. Origin of the Glutamate system includes all the following EXCEPT:
A. DA -antagonists.
B. TRH.
C. 5HT.
D. Stress.
E. Adrenaline*..
C. CNS control
E. Enviromental influence
C. Decrease in salivation
D. Bronchial constriction*
E. Decrease in peristalsis
A. Sleep.
B. Sex.
C. Aggressive outbursts.
D. Thought.*
E. Mood.
C. a child with a behavioural disorder would show a low frequency high amplitude
pattern? [dysmaturation?]
32. The revised third and fourth editions of the Diagnostic and Statistical
Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM) offer an improvement over earlier psychiatric
classifications. Their major advantage is that they
a. Identify mental illness as a disease
b. Deal with predisposing factors
c. Confirm and support the nosologic system
d. Present an all-inclusive classification system
e. Present a multiaxial classification system*
65. .Blockage of the left posterior cerebral artery may cause all the following EXCEPT
A. Aphasia.*
B. Dyslexia.
C. Hemianopia.
D. Visual agnosid.
E. Diplopia.
A. Aphasia.
B. Reduced appreciation of music*.
C. Impaired learning of new words.
D. Difficulty planning tasks.
E. Confabulation.
67. In frontal lobe damage the following are commonly found EXCEPT:
68. The Grasp reflex can be found in all the following EXCEPT:
38.The following are common manifestations of TIA (transient ischemic attacks) of the
vertebrobasilar system EXCEPT:.
A. Transient vertigo .
B. Transient ocular palsy .
C. Transient ipsilateral monocular blindness*
D. drop attacks .
40.In the assessment of parietal lobe lesions, All are true EXCEPT:
A. Ideational (ideomotor) apraxia is the inability to copy a movement when the instruction is
understood there is no motor weakness.
B. Apparent dressing apraxia may be caused by left sided neglect.
C. Constructional apraxia is revealed by an inability to copy two dimensional designs using
matchsticks.
D. Difficulty in writing is likely to be caused by astereognosis.*
E. Prosopagnosia is inability to recognize familiar faces.
A. externally valid
B. internally valid
C. falsifiable
D. observable *
11. What term refers to a researcher's responsibility to explain the nature and purpose of a study to subjects
at the end of an experiment?
A. Confidentiality
B. Debriefing *
C. Interrogation
D. Nondisclosure
F. Paracetamol.
G. Cimetidine.
H. Procyclidine.
I. Dothiepin.
J. Methylcellulose*.
كلها معادة
18.
16. Jenny ran
When calculating
all treatment
a t statistic
conditions
for independent
at night, to groups,
control for
the the
numerator
effect ofistime
the of day. She used the control
technique of
A. variances of the groups divided by the number of subjects
A. number
B. balancingof degrees of freedom
C.
B. squared
elimination
deviations from each treatment mean
C. difference
D. constancy of conditions*
between the treatment group means
D. isolation of directions
19. When the computed F ratio is significant,
17. Scientists generally reject the null hypothesis if the probability of obtaining a pattern of data by
A. each treatment mean is significantly different from every other treatment mean
chance alone is less than
B. there is a significant difference across the treatment means *
C. each treatment mean is significantly different from the grand mean
A. D..01 MSW is larger than MSB
B. .05 *
20. C. In.10a two-way ANOVA, between-groups variability includes all of the following EXCEPT variability
D. .15with
associated
E. .5
A. factor one
B. factor two
C. the interaction between the factors
D. the higher-order interactions *
A.
14. demonstrated
Which of the following is an analytic statement?
B. tested
C. replicated *
A. Dieters' weights will fluctuate.*
D. manipulated
B. Mypet is a cat and not a cat.
C. Lucy is married and single.
23. The overallispurpose
D. Today Sundayofand
theTuesday.
discussion section of a research report is to
2. For almost three years, a 50-year-old woman has been caring for her mother who is
chronically ill with Alzheimer’s disease. A recent immunologic assessment of the caregiver
daughter found that her
a. Cellular immune system control of latent viruses was poor*
b. Percentage of T lymphocytes was high
c. Helper/suppressor ratio was higher than normal
d. Circulating neutrophils were decreased in number
e. Natural killer cells were higher in number
5. The fact that the pituitary secretion of endorphins is closely linked to the secretion of
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) suggests that endorphins facilitate the ability to respond to
a. Retarded growth
b. Hypertension
c. Stress*
d. Chronic pain
e. Tachycardia
6. A 25-year-old male reports to his physician that he has not been able to
sleep for over two days and has been having “strange reactions.” These
reactions are most apt to be caused by
a. Increased levels of blood cortisol
b. Physiologic stress in response to sleep deprivation
c. The effects of the rebound phenomenon
d. Perceptual distortions*
e. Feelings of excessive tiredness
10. Harry Harlow’s work with inanimate surrogate mothers for rhesus
monkeys suggests that the early experience critical to the ultimate development
of normal attachment and sexual behavior is
a. Positive reinforcement
b. Protection from danger
c. Contact comfort*
d. Need-reduction by nursing
e. Sexual stimulation
11. The theory of pain that states that psychological processes directly
exert influence on the pain perception process is the
a. Gate control theory*
b. Nociceptor theory
c. Pattern theory
d. Polymodal nociceptor theory
e. Specificity theory
12. The biologic mechanism that allows behavioral factors to have the
greatest influence on the development of coronary heart disease is the
a. Complex interaction of sympathetic-adrenal-medullary (SAM) and pituitaryadrenal-
cortical activity*
b. Acute behavioral stressors that can raise thresholds for ventricular fibrillation
c. Limbic system that allows emotional responses to activate the endocrine system
d. Heart rate and pressor response to behavioral stressors that increases the turbulence
and sheer stress that promote arterial injury
e. Stress-induced increased levels of corticotropin (ACTH) and cortisol secretion
and decreased levels of brain norepinephrine
13. Which of the following is the most powerful endogenous opioid peptide?
a. Dynorphin*
b. Morphine
c. Neoendorphin (-endorphin)
d. Endorphin
e. Enkephalin (-endorphin)
17. A type I diabetic patient has been treated with relaxation techniques
daily for one month. This treatment is likely to affect the management of
her diabetes by
a. Increased levels of plasma cortisol
b. Increased sensitivity to insulin
c. Increased glucose-stimulated secretion of insulin
d. Significant improvement in glucose tolerance*
e. No significant change in requirements for exogenous insulin
19. Which of the following statements about natural killer cells is true?
a. Their activity increases with the secretion of corticosteroids through the
hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis
b. They play a role in inhibition of tumor growth*
c. They are ineffective in deterring the spread of distant cancer
d. Their activity increases under conditions of psychosocial stress
20. In studies of older twins, which of the following characteristics has the
highest degree of heritability?
a. Nonclinical depression symptoms
b. Longevity
c. Interpersonal skills
d. General cognitive ability*
e. Intellectual ability
21. Which of the following characteristics has the greatest genetic heritability
change over time?
a. Blood pressure
b. Body weight*
c. Alcoholism
d. Heart rate
e. Nicotine addiction
22. Which of the following anxiety disorders has the strongest degree of
heritability?
a. Panic disorder
b. Generalized anxiety
c. Specific phobia*
d. Posttraumatic stress disorder
e. Obsessive-compulsive disorder
26. A young man consults you because his older brother has schizophrenia
and he is concerned about his risk of developing schizophrenia. Obviously
several issues need to be addressed. With regard to the genetic risk, a
sibling of a patient with schizophrenia is more likely to develop the disease
than a person with a negative family history by a factor of about
a. 3
b. 6
c. 9*
d. 12
e. 15
31. From studies of twins reared together and reared apart, which of the
following characteristics has been confirmed as having the highest heritability?
a. Aggressiveness*
b. Extroversion
c. Empathy
d. Stress reaction
e. Neuroticism
32. A young woman had an initial episode of psychosis at age 19, with
paranoid delusions, auditory hallucinations, and disorganized behavior.
She responded well to an atypical neuroleptic, but has not been able to live
independently and develop an occupation. She has had two subsequent
psychotic episodes similar to the initial one. The etiology of her chronic
psychiatric illness is most strongly related to
a. Environmental factors
b. Polygenic inheritance*
c. A chromosomal abnormality
d. Simple recessive inheritance
e. An inborn error of metabolism
33. A disorder resulting from a single gene defect that may produce severe
behavioral disturbance is
a. Major affective disorder, bipolar type
b. Dyslexia
c. Phenylketonuria*
d. Porter’s syndrome
e. Down’s syndrome
34. Which of the following choices shows the highest heritability in later
life?
a. Type A behavior
b. Locus of control
c. Depressive symptoms
d. Dementia
e. Self-perceived competence*
35. Which of the following traits has been most useful for behavior geneticists
studying heritability of personality?
a. Agreeableness and likeability
b. Conscientiousness and conformity
c. Culture and openness
d. Extraversion and neuroticism*
e. Friendliness and achievement
37. An infant smiles every time the parents approach the crib and look at
him. Emotional expressions in an infant, such as smiling, are stereotyped
sequences of movements that are under the control of
a. A specific sign stimulus*
b. Genetic influences
c. A conditioned response
d. Imprinting
e. Cultural determinants
41. In order to subdivide the cortex into 52 distinct areas, Korbinian Brodmann made
comparisons between different cortical regions using
a. stained tissue samples, which revealed differences in cellular morphology and
architecture*.
b. extracellular single-cell recording, which revealed differences in neuronal response properties
such as selectivity and sensitivity.
c. histochemical techniques, which revealed differences in chemical content (e.g.
neurotransmitters).
d. cortical stimulation, which revealed differences in evoked behavioral responses.
42. Hemorrhagic lesions and degeneration of the mammillary bodies as a result of a thiamine
deficiency is associated with
a. Korsakoff’s disease*.
b. Pick’s disease.
c. Huntington’s disease.
d. Herpes simplex encephalitis.
43. Which of the following techniques is the most direct measure of neural events?
a. PET
b. CT
c. EEG*
d. MRI
44. A cluster of symptoms that appear together following brain damage is called a
a. single dissociation.
b. double dissociation.
c. syndrome*.
d. degenerative disorder.
46. If you had a correlation of positive one, the related items would be:
a. completely unrelated
b. moderately correlated
c. very highly correlated
d. identical*
e. lowly correlated
47.In analyzing data, measurements are sometimes categorical, for example "smiles" or
"frowns". This type of measurement is called
a. qualitative measurement*
b. quantitative measurement
c. reliability
d. validity
e. psychometrics
48..A25 year old male patient sustains a serious head injury in an automobile accident. He had
been aggressive and assaultive, but after the accident he is placid and cooperative. He makes
conditional suggestive gestures and comments and masturbates a great deal. The patient’s injury
is most likely to affect what portion of the brain?
(A) Frontal lobes*
(B) Temporal lobes
(C) Parietal lobes
(D) Occipital lobes
(E) Basal ganglia
50.Increased pain perception is associated with damage to what area of the brain?
(A) Thalamus*
(B) Corpus callosum
(C) Basal ganglia
(D) Reticular system
(E) Hypothalamus
51.What is the major area of the brain implicated in Alzheimer’s disease and amnestic disorders?
(A) Amyglada
(B) Parietal lobes
(C) Hippocampus*
(D) Thalamus
(E) Basal ganglia
55. Allof the following structures connect the two cerebral hemispheres EXCEPT
(A) the corpus callosum
(B) the anterior commissur
(C) the hippocampal commissure
(D) the posterior commissure
(E) the amygdale*
57.Which of the following statements about monoamines and their metabolites is true?
(A) Mania is associated with dopamine hypoactivity
(B) Free dopamine is metabolozed by 5-HIIA
(C) There is more plasma monoamine oxidase (MAO) in unmedicated schizophrenics than in
controls
(D) There is no association between levels of MHPG and suicidal behavior
(E) Decreased HVA is seen with clinical improvement in patients treated with neuroleptics*
59..Allof the following statements are valid about intelligence testing EXCEPT
(A)affected by the subject’s motivation
(B)culturally biased
(C) tend to emphasize verbal ability
(D)high scores are incompatible with psychosis*
(E)measures skills enhanced by traditional education
60 Predictive validity is
(A) the extent to which knowledge that a person has a particular mental disorder is useful in
predicting the future course of the illness
(B) related to management and treatment
(C ) relevant to the specificity with which patients with bipolar I disorder improve when treated
with lithium
(D) the basis on which Emil Kraepelin differentiated manic-depressive psychosis from dementia
precox
(E) all the above*
61..Prevalence is the
(A) proportion of a population that has a condition at one moment in time*
(B) ratio of persons who acquire a disorder during a year’s time
(C) risk of acquiring a condition at some time
(D) standard deviation
(E) rate of first admissions to a hospital for a disorder
1. According to psychoanalytic theory, the part of the personality that strives for immediate
gratification
of basic drives is the:
A) id.*
B) ego.
C) superego.
D) collective unconscious.
2. When she was 8 years old, Tina was sexually abused by her uncle. At 14, Tina felt
uncomfortable whenever she saw this uncle but was unable to understand why she felt this way.
A psychoanalyst would be most likely to suggest that Tina is using the defense mechanism of:
A) repression.*
B) reaction formation.
C) rationalization
. D) regression.
4. A person who is careless and disorganized most clearly ranks low on the Big Five trait
dimension known as:
A) emotional stability.
B) extraversion
. C) agreeableness.
* D) conscientiousness.
6. Mental health workers label behavior as psychologically disordered when they judge it:
A) prejudicial, unconsciously motivated, ingenuine, and insane.
B) biologically based, unconsciously motivated, aggressive, and difficult to change.
C) selfish, habitual, and avoidable.
D) atypical, disturbing, maladaptive, and unjustifiable.*
8. Kim is so alarmed by spiders and insects that she avoids most outdoor activities and even
refuses to enter the basement of her own house alone. Kim appears to suffer from
A) obsessive-compulsive disorder.
B) dissociative disorder.
C) mood disorder.
D) phobia*.
9. Chuck is preoccupied with thoughts of jumping out the window of his tenth-floor apartment.
In order to reduce his anxiety, he frequently counts his heartbeats aloud. Chuck would most
likely be diagnosed as experiencing :
A) panic disorder
B) generalized anxiety disorder
C) obsessive-compulsive disorder*.
D) phobia.
10. Andre suffers from acrophobia, a fear of high places. Andre's therapist suggests that his
reaction to heights is a generalization of the fear triggered by a childhood playground accident in
which he fell off a sliding board. The therapist's suggestion reflects a ________ perspective.
A) learning *
B) psychoanalytic
C) trait
D) humanistic
11. Mr. Choi's therapist wants to help him become aware of his conflicting childhood feelings of
love and hate for his parents. The therapist's goal best reflects a primary aim of:
A) client-centered therapy
B) cognitive therapy.
. C) psychoanalysis*.
B) cognitive therapy.
D) systematic desensitization.
21. Which therapeutic approach emphasizes that people are often disturbed because of their
irrational interpretations of events?
A) drug therapy
B) client-centered therapy
C) systematic desensitization
D) cognitive therapy *
15. The discomfort we feel when two thoughts are inconsistent is called:
A) cognitive dissonance*.
B) group polarization
C) deindividuation.
D) the fundamental attribution error.
16. According to Milgram, the most fundamental lesson to be learned from his study of
obedience is that:
A) people are naturally predisposed to be hostile and aggressive.
B) even ordinary people, who are not usually hostile, can become agents of destruction.*
C) the desire to be accepted by others is one of the strongest human motives.
D) people value their freedom and react negatively when they feel they are being coerced to do
something.
18. In one experiment, men talked charmingly because they thought the women on the phone
were beautiful. The fact that the women responded warmly best illustrates the impact of:
A) social facilitation.
B) facilitated communication.
C) the foot-in-the-door phenomenon
D) self-fulfilling prophecies*.
20. Most children believe their school is better than the other schools in their town. This best
illustrates:
A) the just-world phenomenon..
B) ingroup bias.*
C) the fundamental attribution error
D) the reciprocity norm.
21. When 12-year-old Jamilah saw an old man lying on the sidewalk in apparent discomfort, he
prepared to offer help. But when he noticed several adults walk past the man, he concluded that
the man did not need any help. His reaction most clearly illustrates one of the dynamics involved
in:
A) the fundamental attribution error.
C) the foot-in-the-door phenomenon.
B) social loafing.
D) the bystander effect.*
22. Which of the following best describes Freud’s psychological theory of development?
A. Deficit theory
B. Drive theory*
C. Learning theory
D. Conflict theory
E. Experiential theory
25. According to Aaron Beck, the primary defect in depression involves which of the
following?
a. Cognitive distortion*
b. Aggression turned inward
c. Learned helplessness
d. Early childhood loss
e. A history of ambivalent relationships
27. The best type of study for determining the relationship between a certain risk factor and
development of a disease is a :
a. Cohort study*
b. Cross-sectional study
c. Case-history study
d. Case-control study
e. Crossover study
28. Handwashing rituals reflect which of the following defense mechanisms?
a. Regression
b. Repression
c. Undoing*
d. Reversal
e. Projection
29. In “Mourning and Melancholia, “ Freud postulated that the decline in self-esteem that
was experienced by an individual with depression was the result of anger turned inward
against the self. Freud explained that the anger is turned inward due to:
a. An identification with the lost object*
b. A harsh superego
c. A failure to establish good internal objects
d. High levels of constitutional aggression
e. A loss of reality testing
30. The validity of an assessment instrument refers to the extent to which it:
a. Measures what it intends to measure*
b. Can be used successfully in cross-national studies.
c. Provides consistent results when used at different times
d. Provides consistent results when used by different examiners
e. Produces higher rates of false-negative measures.
31. According to the 1990 Global Burden of Disease Study, the leading cause of
neuropsychiatric disability worldwide is:
a. Panic disorder
b. Alcohol use
c. Schizophrenia
d. Bipolar disorder
F. Unipolar major depression*
32. Which of the following stages of the life cycle as described by Erikson corresponds to
Freud’s anal phase?
a. Basic trust versus basic mistrust
b. Autonomy versus shame and doubt*
c. Initiative versus guilt
d. Industry versus inferiority
e. Identify versus role diffusion
35. A male patient enters psychotherapy because of problems in his relationship with his
wife. During the sessions the patient talks about his family of origin, his boss, and his
problems at work, but never discusses details about his wife. This is an example of which
of the following?
a. Sublimation
b. Repression
c. Denial
d. Transference
e. Resistance.*
36. In a study designed to evaluate the efficacy of a new (experimental) form of treatment in
comparison with a standard or placebo (control) treatment, the best way to control for the
influence of known and unknown extraneous variables on treatment outcome is:
a. Assigning to the experimental treatment only those subjects who do not respond
adequately to the control treatment.
b. Conducting the experimental and control treatments in a carefully controlled
environment.
c. Conducting the experimental treatment at a different location from where the
control treatment is conducted.
d. Periodically reassessing treatment outcome during a long follow-up period.
e. Randomized assignment of subjects from a single population to the experimental
treatment or control treatment*.
39. Schemata in cognitive therapy are best described as which of the following?
A. Proposed methods to restructure maladaptive cognitive patterns.
B. Structural units into which cognitive processes can be broken down.
C. Organized, established cognitive structures based on the abstraction of relevant prior
experience*.
D. Negatively distorted thought processes or beliefs that an individual has acquired
through negative life experiences.
42. Integration of clinical and experimental observations in early child development supports
which of the following statements about infant/parent interactions?
A. There is strong empiric support for an initial phase of primary autism.
B. Cross-modal perception is not involved until the second year of life.
C. Infants rarely initiate reciprocal interactions with caretakers.
D. Infants are born with sophisticated perceptual abilities that facilitate
attachment.*
E. The “social smile” is the infant’s first indication of recognizing others.
43. Repeated presentation of conditioned stimulus without being paired with its unconditioned
stimulus will result in which of the following?
A. Stimulus generalization
B. Partial reinforcement
C. Escape learning
D. Discrimination
E. Extinction*
45. A study that follows a group chosen from a well-defined population over an extended
period of time is called a:
A. Cohort study
B. Case-control study
C. Case-history study
D. Retrospective study
E. Cross-sectional study.
46. .A patient’s scores on the Revised Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS-R) subtests
for picture arrangement and block design are very low compared to scores on other subtests.
These results are most suggestive of:
A. Alcoholism
B. Schizophrenia
C. Poor verbal skills
D. A lesion in the frontotemporal lobes
E. A lesion in the nondominant hemisphere.*
47. A child who fears riding a bike becomes less fearful after watching other children having
fun while doing so. This illustrates which of the following learning principles?
A. Reinforcement
B. Habituation
C. Conditioning
D. Attribution
E. Modeling*
49.Which of the following terms best represents the combination of several unconscious
impulses, wishes, or feelings that are attached to a single manifest dream image?
A. Secondary revision
B. Day residues
C. Displacement
D. Libido
E. Condensation*
50. A person who smokes a pack of cigarettes per day stops smoking and experiences the
need for a cigarette after every meal. This phenomenon is an example of:
A. Oral dependence
B. Facilitated tolerence
C. Relapse vulnerability
D. A withdrawal symptom
E. An environmental trigger*
51. At which of the following receptors does phencyclidine’s major action occur?
A. Gamma -aminobutyric acid (GABA) type A
B. N - methyl-D-aspartate acid (NMDA)
C. Serotonin type 2 A (5-HT2A)
D. Dopamine type 2(D2)
E. Mu-opioid
52. Which of the following would be a useful screening test to evaluate an 8-year-old child’s
academic performance?
A. Denver Developmental Screening Test (DDST)
B. McCarthy Scales of Children’s Abilities (MSCA)
C. Wide Range Achievement Test (WRAT)*
D. Vineland Adaptive Behavior Scales.
E. Halstead-Reitan Test.
.53. Children can first recognize their mother’s face as distinct from other faces at:
A. 1 month*
B. 3 months
C. 5 months
D. 8 months
E. 12 months
54. Family studies have found that the first-degree relatives of individuals with bipolar
disorder, type II, have elevated incidence rates of which of the following disorders?
A. Schizoaffective
B. Generalized anxiety
C. Major depressive*
D. Histrionic personality
E. Panic
55. Which of the following terms best defines the degree of spread of scores about the mean?
A. Mode
B. Range
C. Median
D. Standard deviation*
56. In learning theory, the presentation of an aversive stimulus that is contingent upon the
occurrence of a particular response in known as:
A. Extinction
B. Punishment*
C. Positive reinforcement
D. Negative reinforcement
58. Rare occurrences of priapism are most frequently associated with the use of which of the
following medications?
A. Bupropion
B. Trazodone*
C. Amitriptyline
D. Benztropine
E. Diazepam
60. The adolescent who belittles parents and begins to rebel in order to defend against the
regressive pull back to childhood is using which of the following ego defenses?
A. Ascetism
B. Projection
C. Displacement
D. Intellectualization
E. Reversal of affect.*
61. Which of the following questions is useful for evaluating immediate recall?
62. Which of the following developmental disability syndromes is associated with a triple-repeat
genetic abnormality?
A. Rett’s disorder
B. Down syndrome
C. Fragile X syndrome*
D. Asperger’s disorder
E. Williams syndrome.
63. The etiology of benign intracranial hypertension has been linked to:
A. Iron deficiency
B. Hypervitaminosis
C. Hypervitaminosis *.
D. Vitamin E deficiency
E. Vitamin B12 deficiency
64. A patient with sensory impairment over the contralateral face, arm, and leg involving
pinprick, touch, vibration, position, two-point discrimination, and stereognosis most likely
has a lesion in which of the following structures?
65. Which of the following surgical procedures can be used in the treatment of epilepsy
refractory to medications?
66. Which of the following is the mechanism by which disulfiram is helpful in the treatment of
alcohol dependence?
A. Aversion therapy*.
B. Exposure therapy.
C. Negative reinforcement.
D. Neurochemical effect on craving.
67. Which of the following best characterizes the current explanation for group differences
in prevalence of psychiatric illness?
A. The SCID.
B. The Hamilton D.
C. The CGI.
D. The GHQ.
E. None of the above*
70. Which of the following is NOT a risk factor for non-compliance?
A. youth
B. deficient social supports
C. being elderly*
D. having impaired cognition.
E. substance abuse.
71. Which of the following biogenic amines is synthesized in the locus caeruleus?
A. taurine
B. dopamine
C. acetylcholine
D. norepinephrine *
E. 5-Hydroxytryptamine.
74. The side effects of sedation and weight gain are associated with mirtazapine’s
antagonism of which of the following receptors?
A. H1*
B. 5-HT3
C. 5-HT2A
D. ą2
E. 5-HT1A
A. crisis intervention
B. early identification
C. psychiatric rehabilitation
D. mental health education program*
E. reduction of residual effects of mental illness.
76. According to psychoanalytic theory, feelings of persecution are most reflective of which
of the following defense mechanisms?
A. Projection*
B. regression
C. isolation
D. repression
E. reaction formation
77. Which of the following instruments is most helpful in the assessment of children suspected
of having attention-deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)?
78. The most likely chromosomal abnormality associated with fragile X syndrome is
A. chromosome 7 deletion
B. q27, long arm of X chromosome*
C. trisomy 21
D. chromosome 15 deletion
E. trisomy 15
79. Which of the following terms refers to a difficulty in recognizing and describing one’s
emotions?
A. neologism
B. repression
C. reaction formation
D. alexithymia*
E. abreaction.
80. While intoxicated a psychotomimetic drug, a young man reports” seeing sounds” and
“patterns of colors like fireworks or colored flames” associated with real auditory stimuli.
Which of the following terms best describes this type of sensory experience?
A. Synesthesia*
B. oneiric state
C. bouffee delirante
D. isakower phenomenon
E. lilliputian hallucination
81. Pseudologia fantastica is most commonly associated with which of the following?
A. malingering
B. schizophrenia
C. hypochondriasis
D. factitious disorder *
E. somatoform disorder
82. . Individuals with Down’s syndrome have a high incidence which of the following?
A. Multi-infarct dementia
B. dementia pugilistica
C. Alzheimer’s dementia*
D. NPH
E. all the above.
83.Which of the following laboratory findings is common in patients with bulimia nervosa?
A. hyperproteinemia
B. elevated amylase *
C. increased red blood cells
D. hyperkalemia
E. hyperchloremia.
84. Which of the following is the treatment of choice for obstructive sleep apnea?
A. unvulopalatoplasty
B. temazepam
C. tracheostomy
D. nasal continuous positive airway pressure *
E. dextroamphetamine
86. Activities of daily living in dementia patients include each of the following EXCEPT
A. bathing.
B. dressing.
C. toileting
D. feeding.
E. using the telephone*.
90. Autonomous functions of the ego include all the following EXCEPT
(A) perception
(B) language
(C) motor development
(D) repression*
(E) intelligence
95. Erik Erikson used the term” generativity versus stagnation” to describe the conflict occurring
in
(A) childhood
(B) adolescence
(C) young adulthood
(D) middle adulthood*
(E) late adulthood
96.Consistent and affectionate maternal behavior during infancy provides the child with a
continuing of
(A) trust*
(B) autonomy
(C) intiative
(D) industry
(E) identity
98.According to Sigmund Freud’s structural theory of the mind, the psychic apparatus is divided
into
(A) id, ego, and superego*
(B) ego, unconscious, and id
(C) superego, ego, and unconscious
(D) unconscious, conscious, and preconscious
(E) none of the above
102.A physician who has been given a diagnosis of terminal pancreatic cancer constantly
discusses the technical aspects of his case with many of the other physicians in the hospital. This
is an example of which one of the following defense mechanisms?
(A) Repression
(B) Displacement
(C) Dissociation
(D) Regression
(E) Intellectualization*
108.Which of the following statements correctly describes aspects of Freud’s structural theory of
the mind?
(A) The id is conscious
(B) The mind is divided into the preconscious and conscious
(C) The superego is unconscious*
(D) The id is closely associated with reality
(E) The ego is under the domination of primary process thinking
112.A child who likes and looks up to her physician states that she wants to become a doctor
when she grows up. This behavior is an example of
(A) stimulus generalization
(B) modeling*
(C) shaping
(D) positive reinforcement
(E) variable reinforcement
114.A 2-year-old child is afraid of nurses in white uniforms. When his grandmother comes to
visit him wearing a white jacket, he begins to cry. The best explanation for this phenomenon is
(A) stimulus generalization*
(B) habit
(C) instrumental conditioning
(D) learning by trial and error
(E) an emitted operant
117.All of the following factors are important in the successful use of biofeedback EXCEPT
(A) the patient must receive continuous information about the physical parameter
(B) the physical parameter must be detectable and measurable
(C) the patient’s motivation is important
(D) it is used to gain control over the central nervous system*
(E) a large amount of practice is required
118.Although a mother slaps a child on the hand every time she touches a stove, the child begins
to touch the stove more frequently. This is an example of
(A) punishment
(B) negative reinforcement
(C) positive reinforcement*
(D) aversive conditioning
(E) classical conditioning
121. Which of the following functions IS NOT a function of the non-dominant cerebral
hemisphere?
A. Holistic
B. Ideational*
C. Pictorial
D. Geometric
E. Non-linear
A. verify data.
B. state a hypothesis in a form that can be tested
C. derive a hypothesis from theory
D. All of the above *
E. None of the above
3. Talkative vs. silent; frank, open vs. secretive; adventurous vs. cautious; sociable vs. reclusive
—these traits describe which dimension of personality?
a. Agreeableness
b. Conscientiousness
c. Extraversion*
d. Culture
e. Emotional Stability
4. Who is the pioneer that proposed the 16 basic dimensions of normal personality and devised a
questionnaire (16PF) to measure them?
A. Carl Jung
B. Raymond Cattell *
C. Julian Rotter
D. Gordon Allport
E. None of the above
5. When analyzing a past president to describe his personality by coding letters or speeches he
has written, you are using a process called
a. Big Five
b. content analysis *
c. personality assumptions
d. Implicit Personality Theory
e. cognitive approach
6. The best known lexical research on terms relevant to personality was conducted by whom and
how many terms were compiled in this study?
A. Sheldon/3
B. Ancient Greeks/4
C. c. Allport/17,953 *
D. Gordon/5
E. Cattell/18,835
7. During psychology you are falling asleep. You know last night you only got three hours of
sleep; therefore you have a valid reason. The person sitting in front of you is sleeping also. You
automatically think that they are lazy and really don’t care about the class. This is an example of
a. Halo effect
b. Implicit Personality Theory
c. Observer bias *
d. stereotype
e. None of the above
8. Positive correlations (from 0.01 to 1.00) indicate that, as one factor goes ________, the other
factor goes __________.
A. down, up
B. up, down
C. up, up*
D. both a and b
E. All of the above
11. Which of the following examples is most likely to have a negative correlation?
12. The Ancient Greeks hypothesized that there were 4 different personality characteristics.
The four characteristics are:
a. mesomorph *
b. endomorph
c. ectomorph
d. activomorph
e. None of the above
15. If you had a correlation of positive one, the related items would be:
A. completely unrelated
B. moderately correlated
C. very highly correlated
D. identical *
E. lowly correlated
17. If you say that a movie is really good and you like it you would also assume that your best
friend would like it. What implicit personality theory is this?
a. stereotype
b. perceived similarity*
c. Halo effect
d. observer bias
e. All of the above
18. A more neutral term personality type categories or a typical or exemplary instance of a
category is
a. stereotype
b. observation bias
c. openness
d. open-minded
e. prototype *
19. From the Big Five personality dimensions, behaviors such as speaking fluently, displaying
ambition, and exhibiting a high degree of intelligence is
a. Agreeableness
b. Openness
c. Extraversion
d. Conscientiousness*
e. Neuroticism
20. Psychologists seek to understand Ahmed’s personality through his thoughts, beliefs and their
impact on his behavior in certain situations. This is known as the
a. trait approach
b. humanistic approach
c. cognitive approach*
d. psychoanalytic approach
e. All of the above
22. Which of the following would be a phenomenological approach to the study of personality?
24. William Sheldon suggested that body build was associated with personality traits. Which one
best describes a person who’s sensitive and intellectual?
a. conservative
b. neurotic
c. endomorph
d. mesomorph
e. ectomorph*
a.
29. Piaget's studies of "conservation" trace the development of...
a. perception
b. internal representation or "knowledge" *
c. object constancy
d. sensory-motor activity
e. reflexes
52 A physician repeatedly administers a drug to a patient that causes nausea. Eventually the
appearance of the physician (even before administration of the drug) produces nausea in the
patient. The physician is a:
E.
. 53 What is the most plausible link between high self-efficacy and improved performance in
Bandura’s self-efficacy construct?
E. Reward*
A. Coma
B. REM*
E. C &D
A. Pituitary
B. Hippocampus
C. Amygdala
D. Hypothalamus*
C. A significant adverse effect from the behavior on the individual or others
E. A&D
57. Long-term exposure to which of the following has been associated with neuronal cell loss in
the hippocampus?
A. Corticosteroids*
B. Epinephrine
58. Which of the following complications of chronic heavy alcohol consumption is most
likely to persist beyond the first week of abrupt cessation?
A. Delirium
B. Sleep fragmentation *
C. Tactile hallucinations
D. Autonomic hyperactivity
E. Generalized seizures.
59. While in family therapy, a previously distant couple begins to communicate more
frequently and intimately. At the beginning of therapy, the 13-year-old daughter used to sit close
to her mother, frequently looking to the mother for reassurance and support and saying very
little. Now, however, as the parents have become closer, the daughter has become openly hostile
to and dismissive of the father. The daughter’s change in behavior is best explained by the
concept of:
a. Trangulation. *
b. Double binding.
c. Pseudo-hostility.
d. Enmeshment.
e. Transmuting internalization.
60. A 50-year-old individual with depression believes that he is responsible for the
destruction of the world. This is an example of a:
a. Delusion of control.
b. Delusion of persecution.
c. Mood-congruent delusion. *
d. Delusion of reference,
e. Pseudo-hallucinatory experience.
62. The psychiatrist is treating a 34-year-old patient with symptoms of anxiety and a history
of cocaine abuse. The patient has brought suit against her current employer for harassment at
work and has entered her anxiety disorder as evidence of damage. The psychiatrist is obliged to
inform the patient that , if subpoenaed, the psychiatrist:
63. A 62-year-old man with diabetes mellitus is referred to a psychiatrist by his family
because he is not making any sense. When he is asked what is wrong. He answers, “thar szing is
phrumper zu stalking”. This expression has normal intonation, but no one in his family can
understand it. The man verbally responds to other questions with similar utterances, but fails to
successfully execute any instructions. The diagnosis most likely is:
64. A delusion is
A. a sensory experience in the absence of external stimuli
B. a misinterpretation of actual perceptions
C. a false belief not in accord with a person intelligence or culture *
D. a manifestation of unacceptable feelings projected outward
E. unconscious blocking of instinctual feelings
A. Schizophrenia
B. Manic-depressive psychosis
C. Prisoners awaiting trial *
D. Personality disorders
E. Hysteria
A. Usually pleasant
B. Delusional
C. Recognized as 'odd' *
D. Treatable with phenobarbitone
E. Recognized as 'true'
72. . Which of the following psychotic symptoms indicates that the cause is most likely related to
a medical illness?
A. Auditory hallucinations
B. Impairment in reality testing
C. Tactile hallucinations *
D. Thought disorder
E. Visual hallucinations.
75. Psychiatrist : What does the proverb “ People in glass houses should not
throw stones” mean to you? Patient: “The windows will break”
This is an example of:
A. Poverty of thinking.
B. Concrete thinking.*
C. Flight of ideas.
D. Loose associations.
E. Circumstantial thinking.
76. A 26 year old male presents to the emergency department with symptoms
agitation and restlessness. He insists on sitting in the corner of the room with his back to the
wall. Suddenly he begins to stare into the opposite corner and says “No, you can’t make me do
that.” Which of the following symptoms is this patient most likely experiencing?
A. Depersonalization.
B. Hallucinations*.
C. Delusions.
D. Ideas of reference.
E. Illusions.
77. . Two days after a hip replacement operation and while the surgical resident
is examining the 75 year old patient, he notes that the she states that the date is 1954, and that
she is at her son’s house. These impairments illustrate which aspect of the mental status
examination?
A. Concentration.
B. Memory.
C. Thought process.
D. Orientation*.
E. Level of consciousness.
78. A 24 year old lady is suffering from an acute anxiety attack. In the middle of the
attack, she feels as if she is disconnected from the world as if it is unreal or
distant. Which of the following best describe this symptom?
A. Illusion.
B. Depersonalization.
C. Derealization*.
D. Hallucination.
E. Delusion.
A. Circumstantiality.
B. Blocking.
C. Looseness
D. Ideas of refrence*
E. Flight of ideas
A. Automatic obedience.
B. Cataplexy. *
C. Stereotype.
D. Echopraxia.
E. Echolalia.
A. Echolalia.
B. Perseveration. *
C. Stereotypy.
D. mannerism.
E. apraxia
A. Concrete thinking.
B. Abstract thinking. *
C. Delusional thinking.
D. Intellectualization.
E. Rationalization.
94. A variety of phenomena which have in common the apparent disintegration of
boundaries between the self & the surrounding world is called:
A. Eidetic images.
B. Passivity phenomenon.
C. Desultory thinking. *
D. Omission.
E. Reaction formation.
98.Stimuli for release of posterior pituitary hormones ( oxytocin and Arginine vasopressin
,AVP ) include all of the following except:
A. Nausea
B. Labour
C. Increased plasma osmolality*
D. Stress
E. Atrial peptides
99. In relation to neuropathyology of Huntington's disease the following are correct except:
A. the supply of L-tryptophan is the rate of limiting step in the synthesis of 5-HT
B. low levels of 5-HT have been shown to relate to violent or impulsive behaviour
C. 5-HT1A receptors are concentrated in choroids plexus
D. LSD is a 5-HT4 agonist
E. Almost all of the 5-HT in the blood is stored in the red Blood cells *
A. Glycine
B. GABA
C. Glutamic acid *
D. Acetylcholine
E. N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)
106. Components of the limbic system include all of the following Except:
A. Cingulate gyrus
B. Anterior nucleus of the thalamus
C. Septal nuclei
D. Dorsal longitudinal fasciculus*
E. Amygdala
124. Lackof prolactin elevation after a seizure suggests that the patient has had which of the
following types of seizure?
A. Pituitary.
B. Supplementary motor.
C. Grand mal.
D. Complex partial.
E. Non-epileptic. *
A. Macrocephaly. *
B. Facial dysmorphisms.
C. Postnatal growth retardation.
D. Intrauterine growth retardation.
E. Learning difficulties.
126.Which of the following conditions associated with mental retardation does NOT have an
autosomal - recessive inheritance pattern?
A. Adrenogenital syndrome
B. Down syndrome *
C. Hurler’s syndrome
D. Tay-Sachs disease
E. Phenylketonuria.
127. In which of the following types of research studies is a group studied over of
prolonged time period?
A. Case- control.
B. Cross-sectional
C. Crossover
D. Cohort *
E. Retrospective
128.Individuals over age 40 years with Down syndrome frequently develop which of the
following disorders?
A. Pick’s disease
B.Normal pressure hydrocephalus.
C.Vascular dementia.
D.Alzheimer’s disease. *
E.Diffuse Lewy body disease.
129. Unilateral hearing loss associated with vertigo, unsteadiness with falls and
headaches, mild facial weakness and ipsilateral limb ataxia is most commonly associated with
tumors in which of the following locations?
A. Cerebellopontine angle *
B. Cavernous sinus
C. Superior orbital fissure
D. Apex of the temporal bone
E. Jugular foramen
130. Which of the following individuals described the schizoid personality, coined
the term “ schizophrenia,” and introduced the terms” autism” and “ ambivalence”?
A. Prolactin hormone. *
B. Growth hormone.
C. Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH).
D. Thyroid –stimulating hormone (TSH).
E. Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH).
A.Complex partial.
B.Absence. *
C.Parietal lobe.
D.Gelastic
E.Psychogenic.
134.A 32-year-old patient presents with a 1-month history of worsening headaches, episodic
mood swings, and occasional hallucinations with visual, tactile, and auditory content. A
computed tomography (CT) scan of the head is most likely to reveal a tumor in which of the
following areas?
A.Frontal lobe.
B.Temporal lobe. *
C.Parietal lobe.
D.Occipital lobe.
E.Hypothalamus.
A.Donepezil.
B.Galantamine.
C.Memantine. *
D. Rivastigmine.
E.Tacrine.
136.Which of the following procedures would confirm the diagnosis of non-epileptic seizure?
137.Which of the following diagnostic procedures is part of the basic workup for assessment of
the etiology of unexplained mental retardation in a child without obvious dysmorphology or
neurological findings?
A.Chromosomal analysis. *
B. Electroencephalography (EEG).
C. Fluorescent in situ hybridization.
D. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan.
138.. the following are true with regard to mode of inheritance Except:
A. Duchenne's mascular dystrophy is X-linked recessive
B. female carries of Lesch-Nyhan are mosaic for the condition due to random inactivation of the
X chromosome
C. Phenylketonuria (PKU) incidence shows variation across ethnic groups
D. Prader-Willi syndrome derives from a lack of maternal phenylalairine*
E. neurofibromatosis is autosomal dominant
139. the somatic phenotype of Prader-Willi syndrome includes all except:
A. mild learning disability
B. frequent spinal deformities
C. hypogonadisim
D. small extremities
E. non-food-related belligerence *
A. Lithium.
B. Carbamazepine. *
C. Fluoxetine.
D. Nortriptyline.
E. Clonazepam.
145. All of the following non-stimulant medications have empirical support for attention –deficit
hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) EXCEPT:
A. Fluoxetine. *
B. Clonidine.
C. Bupropion
D. Imipramine.
E. Atomoxetine.
146. The most frequent cause of death following a tricyclic antidepressant overdose is:
A. Rhabdomyolysis.
B. Hypotension.
C. Stroke.
D. Arrhythmia. *
E. Hyperpyrexia
147. The difference in the rate and extent to which a brand-name vs. a generic drug becomes
available to the site of action , given the same dose and conditions, is measured as:
A. Bioequivalence. *
B. Bioavailability.
C. Half-life.
D. Time to peak.
E. Biometabolism.
A. Lithium.
B. Carbamazepine.
C. Valproic acid. *
D. Risperidone.
E. Clozapine.
A. Alprazolam.
B. Flurazepam. *
C. Lorazepam.
D. Temazepam
E. Triazolam.
151. Lithium exposure during the first trimester of pregnancy increases the risk of
congenital abnormalities in which of the following organs?
A. Heart. *
B. Brain.
C. Lungs.
D. Kidneys.
E. Liver.
A. Carbamazepine. *
B. Fluoxetine.
C. Cimetidine.
D. Disulfiram
(A) incidence
(B) point prevalence*
(C ) frequency
(D) risk factor
(E) cohort
159. Which of the following is not a clue suggestive of organic mental disorders?
160. In a young confused adult patient, the finding of diffuse delta waves in an awake
electroencephalographic recording would be most consistent with:
162. In Erikson's theory of psychological tasks, which of the following is NOT a correct task?
163. By all indications, the most popular drug of abuse among young people today is:
(A) Stimulants
(B) Marijuana
(C) Alcohol
(D) Tobacco*
(E) Sedative hypnotics
165. From studies of twins reared together and reared apart, which of the following characteristics
has been confirmed as having the highest heritability?
(A) aggressiveness
(B) extroversion
(C) empathy
(D) stress reaction
(E) neuroticism*
166. The complex of severe psychologic disorders known as schizophrenia has a demonstrable
basis that is characterized as
167. A disorder resulting from a single gene defect that may produce severe mental problems is
168. The prominence of genetic factors in alcoholism is illustrated by all the following findings
EXCEPT that:
169. Of the following illnesses or syndromes, which is LEAST related to genetic factors?
(A) Schizophrenia
(B) Panic disorder*
(C) Bipolar disorder
(D) Alcoholism
(E) Antisocial personality
170. Ethology has made major contributions to understanding human behaviour through all the
following concepts EXCEPT
(A) sodium
(B) potassium
(C) calcium*
(D) iron
(E) manganese
172. The following associations exist between neuropsychiatric disorders and disturbances in
specific neurotransmitter systems EXCEPT
173. All of the following statements about glutamate neurotransmission are true EXCEPT
174. Basic principles to follow when prescribing medications include the following EXCEPT
175. In a 3O-year-old man with chronic schizophrenia, treatment is changed from administration
of haloperidol to administration of the atypical antipsychotic drug clozapine. Which of the
following side effects will probably NOT occur with clozapine?
176. The following psychotropic medications require regular blood monitoring EXCEPT
(A) clozapine
(B) lorazepam*
(C) lithium
(D) valproate
(E) carbamazepine
178. Which of the following is often found in the families of patients with SDAT?
A. Trisomy 19
B. Trisomy 23
C. Trisomy 21
D. Huntington’s disease*
179. Which of the following is the least likely finding in the history and physical examination
of a patient with anorexia nervosa?
a.) Lanugo hair
b.) Amenorrhea
c.) Hypothermia
d.) Bradycardia
e.) Tachycardia*
180. Which of the following medications should be avoided in depressed or anxious patients
with bulimia?
a.) Fluoxetine
b.) Bupropion*
c.) Buspirone
d.) Sertraline
181. Cross cultural studies have shown greatest agreement on prevalence of:
* A psychoses
B. psychophysiologic disorders
C . phobic neuroses
D . personality disorder s
E. sexual deviations
* A . Elderly frequently respond to much lower doses of medication than younger pts.
B. The elderly are not at great err risk for ex trapperamidal side effects.
D . The therapeutic effcts of antipsychotic medications typically are Evident within four weeks
of commencing taking the medic at ion.
D . The elderly are no more susceptible to orthostatic side effect
185. Which of the following is not part of the negative cognitive triad?
A. negative perception of self
B. negative perception of the future
C. negative perception of the world
D. negative perception of your wife*
186. Which of the following is considered the marker enzyme for the nucleus basalis of Meynert
(substantia innominata)?
A. Catechol- O - methyltransferase
B. Dopamine beta hydroxylase
C. Choline Acetyl transferase*
D. Glutamic acid decarboxylase
E. Tyrosine hydroxylase
187. Which of the following is not true regarding dopamine and its pathways?
A. Nigrostriatal pathway runs from the substantia nigra to the caudate and putamen
B. The mesolimbic system and the mesocortical system project from the ventral tegmental
area
C. The mesolimbic system projects to the amygdala, hippocampus, nucleus accumbens, and
the septal area
D. The mesocortical system projects to the frontal cortex
E. Stimulation of the tuberoinfundibular system stimulates the release of prolactin*
189. Which of the following is least correct regarding the 5 stages of death and dying as
described by Kubler-Ross?
A. 1st stage is usually Shock and Denial- pts describe numbness and sense of unreality
B. The second stage is usually Anger at self, God, the doctor.
C. The third stage is usually Bargaining
D. 4th stage is usually Clinical Depression- pts in this stage usually require antidepressant *
E. Acceptance- Patient becomes comfortable talking about death realistically. Religious
outlook often helps. A chaplain might help for those who have no regular minister, pastor.
190. Which of the following is most correct regarding normal development in old age?
A. The usual struggle is between generativity and stagnation
B. The usual struggle is between intimacy and isolation
C. The usual struggle is between integrity and despair*
D. The usual finding is loneliness
E. 80% of the elderly view their health as a problem
191. Which of the following is the best test of frontal lobe functioning?
A. Wisconsin Card Sort*
B. Minnesota multiphasic personality Inventory
C. Rorschach test
D. Thematic Apperception test
E. Wechsler Adult Intelligence Test-Revised
193. In a patient with bulimia who is actively purging which of the following is the least likely
laboratory value?
A. hyperkalemia
B. hypochloremia
C. alkalosis
D. elevated serum bicarbonate
E. hypokalemia
198. The normal distribution, or normal curvet has the following properties EXCEPT:
F. it is bimodal*
G. it is continuous
H. it is symmetrical about its mean
I. the mean, median, and mode are all equal
J. the area under the curve is one
II-2.Evaluation of thyroid function may be particularly helpful in the diagnosis and treatment of
which of the following conditions?
(A) Phobic disorder
(B) Schizotypal personality disorder
(C) Major depression
(D) Schizophrenia
(E) None of the above
II-3. Brian-imaging techniques, such as computed tomography (CT) would be most useful in
evaluating
(A) bipolar disorder
(B) schizophrenia
(C) panic disorder
(D) Alzheimer dementia
(E) Sleep apnea
II-5.Psychiatric rating scales that have been developed to evaluate symptoms and
psychopathology include all the following EXCEPT
(A) Hamilton rating scale for depression (Hamilton )
(B) Mental status examination record (MSER)
(C) Present state examination ( PSE )
(D) Brief psychiatric rating scale ( BPRS)
(E) Social adjustment scale (SAS)
II-8.The theories of Carl Jung include all the following concepts EXCEPT
(A) animus and anima
(B) libido as sexual energy
(C) collective unconscious
(D) archetypes
(E) the “shadow’
II-9.Which of the following theorists primarily focused on the maturation of the sense of self
from the infantile fragility and fragmentation into the cohesive and stable structure of adulthood?
(A) Piaget
(B) Erikson
(C) Freud
(D) Klein
(E) Kohut
II-10.According to the developmental theories of Piaget, the concrete operational stage, during
which the child becomes less literal and therefore able to generalize, occurs between ages
(A) 1 and 2
(B) 2 and 3
(C) 4 and 7
(D) 7 and 14
(E) 15and 17
II-11.All the following statements about the psychoanalytic concept of the oedipal phase of
development are true EXCEPT that
(A) it occurs between the phallic and the latency stages
(B) it is usually followed by identification with the parent of the same sex
(C) it occurs only in the development of children destined to become neurotic
(D) it is associated with the phenomenon of castration anxiety
(E) it occurs in both males and females
II-12.All the following statements about rapid eye movement (REM) sleep are true EXCEPT
(A) REM sleep is associated with hypotonia
(B) The amount of REM sleep declines between adolescence and old age
(C) REM sleep is the only state in which dreams occur
(D) A person is more apt to awaken after REM than non-REM(NREM) sleep
(E) Penile erections commonly occur during REM sleep
II-13.Sleepwalking is correctly characterized by all the following statements EXCEPT
(A) it occurs most frequently late in the sleep cycle
(B) it often disappears as the person reaches adolescence or adulthood
(C) it occurs during the same period of the sleep cycle as sleep terrors
(D) it is associated with difficulty in awakening the sleepwalker
(E) It is associated with full amnesia for the event
II-14.Identuty diffusion, as described by Erik Erikson, occurs primarily during
(A) infancy
(B) childhood
(C) adolescence
(D) adulthood
(E) old age
II-15.In psychoanalytic theory the superego
(A) is totally unconscious
(B) is a defense mechanism
(C) functions to reduce guilt and shame
(D) contains the sexual and aggressive drives
(E) contains the ego-ideal
II-16.The early studies of Réné Spitz suggested that
(A) disturbed mothers are instrumental in causing behavioral problems in early infancy
(B) infants reared with little maternal contact are more susceptible to infections and behavioral
problems
(C) infants reared in an institutional setting are likely to become autistic
(D) the number of toys available to infants is a crucial factor in their development
(E) environmental variables have little impact on the health of infants
II-17.Psychoanalytic theory describes the ego as a coherent system of functions, including all the
following EXCEPT
(A) primary process thinking
(B) regulation of instinctual drives
(C) formation of relationships
(D) adaptation to reality
(E) speech
II-18.All the following statements concerning children’s IQ scores are true EXCEPT that
(A) the scores can vary widely if an individual child is tested more than once
(B) the scores can increase over time in children who are highly motivated
(C) the scores correlate fairly well with achievement in school
(D) the scores are determined predominantly by heredity
(E) the mean of the scores remains fairly constant within a given group
II-19. Piaget is best known for his theories and investigations of
(A) cognitive development
(B) affective component of development
(C) mood-related development
(D) motor development
(E) kinesthetic development
II-20.True statements about the latency stage of development include all the following EXCEPT
(A) it begins following the resolution of the Oedipus complex
(B) it is the phase in which identity crisis usually occurs
(C) it consolidates identification with the parent of the same sex
(D) it is often associated with some sexual awareness or activity
(E) it involves wider peer contact
II-21.The highest density of cholinergic innervation of any brain structure is found in the
(A) cerebral cortex
(B) caudate nucleus and putamen
(C) cerebellum
(D) spinal cord
(E) locus ceruleus
II-22.In the brain, transmission along the neuron and across synapses is accomplished by which
of the following mechanisms ?
(A) Mechanical
(B) Neurohormonal and mechanical
(C) Chemical
(D) Chemical and electrical
(E) Electromagnetic
II-23.The state of cataplexy
(A) may be precipitated by an orgasm
(B) is associated with unconsciousness
(C) involves a sudden increase in general muscle tone
(D) often lasts for 1 to 2 h
(E) is usually treated with neuroleptics
II-24.Hypothalamic function is closely related to all the following EXCEPT
(A) sleep
(B) appetite
(C) memory
(D) sexual behavior
(E) fear
II-25.Biologic rhythms – cyclic, internally regulated bodily responses – are operative in all the
following EXCEPT
(A) birth rate
(B) death
(C) body temperature
(D) personality
(E) depression
II-26.True statements about beta-endorphins include all the following ECXEPT
(A) they are involved in the perception of pain
(B) they are releases from the pituitary in response to stress
(C) they are classified as neurotransmitters
(D) they are highly localized to the cerebral cortex
(E) chemically they are peptides
II-27.All the following evidence supports the dopamine hypothesis of schizophrenia EXCEPT
(A) the largest concentrations of dopamine are found in the cerebral cortex
(B) the basal ganglia may be metabolically hyperactive in unmedicated schizophrenia
(C) the phenothiazine drugs block dopamine receptors
(D) many of the antipsychotic drugs increase the level of dopamine metabolites
(E) parkinsonism is a side effect of many antipsychotic medications
II-28.Most studies suggest that the major inhibitory neurotransmitter in the brain is
(A) serotonin
(B) dopamine
(C) beta-endorphin
(D) y-aminobutyric acid
(E) somatostatin
II-29.The Klüver-Bucy syndrome is characterized by
(A) compulsive anal activity
(B) rage attacks
(C) hypersexuality
(D) hypophagia
(E) catalepsy
II-30.The right (nondominant) cerebral hemisphere is thought to mediate or control all the
following functions EXCEPT
(A) visuospatial organization
(B) logical reasoning
(C) perception of body image
(D) perception of rhythm
(E) perception of part-whole relationships
II-31.Typical behavior in patients displaying the catastrophic reaction, as defined by Goldstein
(1939) and Gainotti (1972), includes all the following EXCEPT
(A)restlessness and hypermotility
(B)ingratiating behavior toward the examiner
(C)sudden bursts of tears
(D)cursing
(E)refusal to continue the examination
II-32. The dietary amino-acid precursor of catecholamines is
(A)Tryptophan
(B)glutamic
(C)aspartic acid
(D)tyrosine
(E)glycine
II-33.The orbitofrontal syndrome, associated with injury or tumor of the frontal lobes, is
characterized by all the following ECXEPT
(A) apathy
(B) irritability
(C) jocular affect and euphoria
(D) impulsive behavior
(E) emotional lability
II-34.While psychosis plus delirium can be found in a wide variety of severe endocrinopathies,
psychosis with a clear sensorium is most likely to be found in
(A) hypothyroidism
(B) hyperthyroidism
(C) hypoparathyroidism
(D) hyperparathyroidism
(E) hypercortisolism
II-35.The cell bodies of serotonin-releasing neurons are located in an area of the brain known as
the
(A) raphe nuclei
(B) locus ceruleus
(C) cingulate cortex
(D) basal forebrain
(E) frontal cortex
II-36.For a substance to be classified as a neurotransmitter, all the following must be true
EXCEPT
(A) the substance must be concentrated in the presynaptic nerve terminal
(B) the substance must be released by a depolarizing stimulus applied to the neuron
(C) the effects on the postsynaptic receptor are the same whether the substance is released from
the presynaptic neuron or applied exogenously
(D) the neuron must be able to synthesize the substance
(E) there must be no mechanism for inactivation of the substance after its release from the
presynaptic nerve terminal
II-37.Which of the following types of studies offers the most promise in elucidating the
interaction between genetic and environmental factors in psychiatric illness ?
(A) Family risk studies
(B) Twin studies
(C) Adoption studies
(D) Genetic marker studies
(E) Prospective longitudinal studies
II-38.Information is transmitted along a neuron in a series of electrochemical events know as
(A) translators
(B) resting potentials
(C) action potentials
(D) polarity maintainers
(E) none of the above
II-39.The group of neurotransmitters known as biogenic amines include all the following
EXCEPT
(A) y-aminobutyric acid (GABA)
(B) serotonin
(C) dopamine
(D) acetylcholine
(E) epinephrine
II-40.All the following endocrine glands are subject to control by the brain EXCEPT the
(A) pancreatic islets
(B) pituitary
(C) Fparathyroid
(D) thyroid
(E) adrenal
II-41.In the treatment of psychophysiologic disorders, all the following statements about minor
tranquilizers are true EXCEPT
(A) they fail to result in long-term improvement
(B) they reduce interpersonal dilemmas
(C) they produce drowsiness
(D) they result in need for increased dosages
(E) they reduce high levels of stress
II-42.All the following hormones are recognized as being important in fluencing sexual behavior
EXCEPT
(A) luteinizing hormone releasing factor
(B) oxytocin
(C) estradiol
(D) testosterone
(E) androstenedione
II-43.All the following are common forms of psychophysiologic disorders EXCEPT
(A) bronchial asthma
(B) dysmenorrhea
(C) headache
(D) diabetes
(E) neurodermatitis
II-44.When an axon is cut, all the following events take place EXCEPT
(A) there is a rapid local degeneration of the axon and myelin sheath
(B) macrophages from the general circulation are unable to enter the area to phagocytose axonal
debris
(C) proliferation of fibrous astrocytes forms a glial scar around the zone of trauma
(D) scarring can block the course taken by the regenerating axons
(E) degeneration spreads in both directions along the axon from the zone of trauma
II-45.Clinical features of major depressive disorders suggest a defect in the
(A) frontal lobes
(B) pituitary
(C) hippocampus
(D) hypothalamus
(E) corpus callosum
II-46.Immunocompetence can be suppressed by all the following EXCEPT
(A) the endocrine system
(B) chronic stress
(C) the central nervous system
(D) the autonomic nervous system
(E) psychosocial factors
II-47.All the following statements on the influence of environment on brain structure and
behavior are true EXCEPT
(A) the structure of the brain is to an important degree specified by genetic and developmental
processes
(B) the pattern of interconnections between neurons is influenced considerably by experience
(C) there is very little evidence for the notion of the critical period in the development of normal
social and perceptual competence
(D) at certain stages in its development, the integrative action of the brain and its cellular
structure are dependent upon the brain’s interaction with its environment
(E) the action of the environment on the brain varies with age
II-48. The pituitary secretion of endorphins is closed linked to the secretion of
adrenocorticotropic hormone (ATCH) so that endorphins facilitate the ability to respond to
(A) retarted growth
(B) severe hypertension
(C) stress
(D) chronic pain
(E) tachycardia
II-49.Antibody titers to latent viruses, e.g., Epstein-Barr or herpes simplex, can be increased at
least initially by all the following EXCEPT
(A) relaxation training
(B) immunosuppressive chemotherapy
(C) the stress of academic examination
(D) loneliness
(E) sustained noise
II-50.Psychosocial stress increases the secretion of catecholamines and thus induces an increase
in a number of cardiovascular pathogenic phenomena. All the following are increased EXCEPT
(A) damage to intima of coronary arteries
(B) blood pressure and heart rate
(C) blood lipids
(D) first-degree AV block
(E) ventricular arrthythmias
II-51.Hyperventilation from anxiety, threat, or fear results in all the following EXCEPT
(A) reduced CO2 in the blood
(B) reduced acid level in the blood
(C) increased sympathetic activity
(D) increased risk of cardiac arrhythmia
(E) increased oxygen supplied to brain tissue
II-52.Studies of the effects of acute and chronic stress in humans indicate that the activity of all
the following components of the immune system are decreased EXCEPT
(A) polymorphonuclear granulocytes
(B) lymphocyte T-cell cytotoxicity
(C) production of interferon
(D) latent virus antibody titers
(E) activity of natural killer cells
II-53.Dream deprivation in humans tends to produce
(A) impaired performance on simple verbal tasks with no emotional content
(B) less total need for dream sleep
(C) major impairment of psychological functions
(D) retardation of formation of memory
(E) integration of emotional material with memories of other experiences
II-54.Experimental preavoidance stress-conditioning procedures can induce significant increases
in all the following EXCEPT
(A) plasma potassium
(B) plasma sodium
(C) plasma aldosterone
(D) blood pressure
(E) heart rate
II-55.The diathesis-stress model of psychophysiologic disorders postulates the presence of which
of the following major factor ?
(A) Inadequate coping style
(B) Individual response stereotype
(C) Lack of health belief resolution
(D) Adequate homeostatic restraints
(E) Unconditioned stimulus
II-56.harry Harlow’s work with inanimate surrogate mothers for monkeys suggests that the early
experience critical to the ultimate development of “love “ is
(A) positive reinforcement
(B) protection from danger
(C) contact comfort
(D) need-reduction by nursing
(E) sexual stimulation
II-57.The hormone with the greatest role in aggression is
(A) thyroxine
(B) testosterone
(C) estrogen
(D) progesterone
(E) aldosterone
II-58.A direct pathologic consequence of stress-induced elevation of plasma cortisone is injury to
the
(A) neuroendocrine system
(B) immune system
(C) cardiovascular musculature
(D) hypothalamus
(E) central nervous system
II-59.Which of the following substances is the most responsive to psychosocial stress ?
(A) Catecholamines
(B) Growth hormone
(C) Endorphins
(D) Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH)
(E) Insulin
II-60.The gate control theory of pain assumes all the following EXCEPT
(A) the substantia gelatinosa is the primary vehicle for gating
(B) the spinal gate mechanism is influenced by nerve impulses that descend from the brain
(C) the activity in the large nerve fibers will tend to facilitate the transmission by opening the
gate
(D) motivation, emotion, and cognition modulate the pain experience
(E) the spinal gate mechanism in the dorsal horn modulates the transmission from afferent fibers
to spinal cord transmission cells
II-61.Research on rapid eye movement (REM) sleep patterns shows all the following findings
EXCEPT that
(A) a newborn baby spends more than 50 percent of sleep time in REM sleep
(B) under normal circumstances, 80 percent of the adult sleep cycle consists of REM sleep
(C) deep sleep begins to be replaced with longer periods of REM sleep after the age of 30
(D) the amount of REM sleep determines the amount of actual rest
(E) when REM sleep is interrupted consistently, tiredness and neurotic tendencies develop
II-62.The most common organic explanation for a sleep disturbance in a healthy person is
(A) disruption of normal circadian rhythms
(B) accumulation of hepatic enzymes
(C) the inevitable consequences of high activity
(D) suppressed REM sleep
(E) misuse of hypnotics
II-63.A lesion of the axons of motor neurons that innervate skeletal muscle (lower motor
neurons) will result in all the following consequences EXCEPT
(A) paralysis of individual muscles on the side of the lesion
(B) a paradoxical increase in reflex activity
(C) reduction in muscle mass (atrophy)
(D) decrease in muscle tone
(E) sealing off of the axoplasm
II-64. All the following statements about sleeping pills are correct EXCEPT
(A) they lose their effectiveness in about 2 weeks
(B) barbiturates gradually lead to an increase in hepatic enzymes
(C) patients develop tolerance for benzodiazepines much less rapidly than for pentobarbital
(D) barbiturates enhance REM sleep
(E) there is often a broad cross-tolerance to other hypnotics
II-65.All the following response patterns will usually accompany dreaming EXCEPT
(A) electroencephalographic desynchrony
(B) more visual imagery during non -REM sleep
(C) rapid eye movements
(D) loss of sternocleidomastoid tonus
(E) cardiorespiratory irregularities
II-67.The relationship between social and biologic processes in the generation of behavior has
historically been classified by which of the following terms ?
(A) Classically conditioned
(B) Organic and functional
(C) Genetic and familial
(D) Neuropathologic and sociopathologic
(E) Psychoanalytic and dynamic
II-68.When one has no sense of control over a stressful situation, all the following physiologic
reaction will occur EXCEPT
(A) weaker corticosteroid elevations will develop
(B) an endogenous opioid peptide will be released
(C) a brief endogenous opiate analgesia will be produced
(D) greater suppression of the cyto-toxicity of natural killer cells will occur than in controllable
stress
(E) a weaker immune response to mitogen stimulation will develop than in controllable stress
II-69.Dream deprivation is most apt to produce
(A) a rebound phenomenon of increased dreaming
(B) an increase in anxiety and irritability
(C) acceleration of memory formation of emotionally toned words
(D) a decrement in intellectual function
(E) a temporary increase in night-mares
II-70.Siblings of schizophrenics are more likely to become schizophrenic than more persons
chosen randomly from the population by a factor of about
(A) 2
(B) 4
(C) 6
(D) 8
(E) 10
II-71.The prominence of genetic factors in alcoholism is illustrated by all the following findings
EXCEPT that
(A) close relatives of alcoholics have a fourfold increased risk
(B) an alcoholic’s children who are given up for adoption at birth are at fourfold increased risk
(C) the risk for the identical twin of an alcoholic is much higher than for a fraternal twin
(D) close relatives of alcoholics are significantly more vulnerable for other psychiatric illnesses
(E) children of an alcoholic become less intoxicated at a given alcohol level than do controls
II-72.The most important ( frequent ) genetic cause of mental retardation is
(A) Bartholin-Patau syndrome
(B) Edwards’ syndrome
(C) Down’s syndrome
(D) Turner’s syndrome
(E) Klinefelter’s syndrome
II-73.Genetic factors aremost likely to predispose a person to alcoholism by increasing any of the
following EXCEPT
(A) positive reinforcement of alcohol consumption
(B) functional tolerance of alcohol
(C) level of alcohol dependence
(D) rate of alcohol metabolism
(E) level of acetylaldehyde
II-74.A person with Klinefelter’s syndrome has the genotype
(A) XY
(B) YY
(C) XXY
(D) XYY
(E) XXX
II-75.Factors that influence a person’s gender identity include all the following EXCEPT
(A) chromosomal configuration (XX or XY )
(B) gender assigned at birth
(C) internal reproductive structures
(D) role model of parent
(E) response of parent to child’s assigned gender
II-76.Heredity accounts for approximately what percentage of total variation in IQ scores within
a family ?
(A) 5 percent
(B) 25 percent
(C) 50 percent
(D) 75 percent
(E) 100 percent
II-77.Ethology is characterized by all the following concepts EXCEPT
(A) behavior is best studied under controlled conditions
(B) behavior is best studied comparatively
(C) behavior is the result of interaction between genetic endowment and environment
(D) innate behavior is triggered by a sign stimulus or releaser
(E) previous learning is unnecessary for the successful expression of a fixed action pattern
II-78.The complex of severe psychologic disorders known as schizophrenia has a demonstrable
basis that is characterized as
(A) environmentally determined
(B) polygenic
(C) a chromosomal aberration
(D) a simple recessive trait
(E) an inborn error of metabolism
II-79.Ethology has made major contributions to understanding human behavior through all the
following concepts EXCEPT
(A) fixed action pattern
(B) critical period
(C) imprinting
(D) ethnic bonds
(E) sign stimulus
II-80.A disorder resulting from a single gene defect that may produce severe mental problems is
(A) manic-depressive psychosis
(B) dyslexia
(C) phenylketonuria
(D) Porter’s syndrome
(E) Down’s syndrome
II-81.Emotional expressions involving a stereotyped sequence of fixed action patterns include all
the following EXCEPT
(A) smiling
(B)brow flash response
(C)startle response
(D)Apprehension
(E)joy
II-82.Which of the following is LEAST likely to be considered an ontogenetic stage of synaptic
development and modification?
(A)Synapse formation under genetic and developmental control
(B)Maintenance of newly developed synapses occurring during critical periods
(C)Regulation of transient and long-term effectiveness of synapses
(D)Integration of cellular structure for human mentation
(E)Alteration of preexisting pathways and development of new patterns
II-83.Human behavioral patterns that have the potential of containing major innate (i.e., genetic,
or not learned ) components include all the following EXCEPT
(A) intelligence
(B) brow flash response
(C)Facial expressions of anger, fear, disgust, and joy
(D) smiling
(E) handshake greeting
II-84.True statements about personality traits and aging include all the following EXCEPT
(A) a person’s personality traits after age 30 tend to be less variable
(B) the personalities of adolescents show lower levels of stability than those of adults
(C) most people redefine and make alterations in their personalities during the period of midlife
crisis
(D) the neuroticism trait in personality has a high correlation with lower levels of stability
(E) personality traits are relatively stable over one’s life span
II-85.Although there is no uniform asthmatic personality type, the most frequent psychological
characteristic of boys with bronchial asthma is
(A) hostility
(B) general anxiety
(C) frustrated oral needs
(D) dependency
(E) latent homosexuality
II-86.Freud maintained that neuroses were primarily a result of
(A) overly severe toilet training
(B) inappropriate identification
(C) primary processes
(D) inadequate superego development
(E) sexual disturbances
II-87.In traditional psychoanalysis, transference is the process where in
(A) psychic energy, or libido, is transferred from the id to the ego and superego
(B) a patient invests the analyst with attitudes and feelings derived from vital earlier associations
(C) certain psychological symptoms seemingly defer to new symptoms that frequently are more
accessible to analysis
(D) early object choices are gradually decathected
(E) latent dream content is transformed into manifest content
II-88.In Carl Roger’s personality theory, the essential components of a psychotherapeutic
process involve all the following EXCEPT
(A) a therapist’s empathy
(B) a therapist’s unconditional positive regard
(C) interpretation of unconscious wishes and feelings
(D) reflection of a client’s feelings
(E) clarification of conflictive feelings and attitudes
II-89.All the following are examples of projective tests EXCEPT
(A) thematic apperception test (TAT)
(B) draw-a-person test
(C) sentence completion test
(D) Rorschach test
(E) Minnesota multiphasic personality inventory (MMPI)
II-90.All the following statements about schizophrenia are true EXCEPT that
(A) twin, family, and adoption studies have demonstrated that schizophrenia has a significant
genetic basis
(B) higher socioeconomic status correlates positively with the incidence of schizophrenia
(C) auditory hallucinations are frequently present
(D) chlorpromazine is an effective form of treatment
(E) communication conflicts in families of schizophrenics play an etiologic role
II-91.Anterograde amnesia is associated with which of the following disorders?
(A) Mild retardation
(B) Hypochondriasis
(C) Sociopathy
(D) Korsakoff’s Psychosis
(E) Manic-depressive psychosis
II-92.All the following statements about paranoid disorders are true EXCEPT that
(A) denial and projection are the most common defense mechanisms
(B) affected patients characteristically experience high levels of anxiety
(C) hallucinations are frequent, although thinking is rarely delusional
(D) repression of homosexual wishes may be a frequent psychodynamic determinant of the
disorder
(E) the prognosis for patients who have classic paranoia is poor
II-93.ccording to Freud, the superego contains the
(A) conscience
(B) pleasure principal
(C) ego instincts
(D) reality principal
(E) internalized ego
II-94.All the following are tenets of psychoanalytic theory EXCEPT that
(A) all mental events and attitudes have unconscious antecedent causes
(B) a significant portion of the contents of the mind is unconscious
(C) normal and pathologic mental functioning are qualitatively different
(D) people strives to maximize pleasure and minimize tension
(E) early experience is important in the formation of individual personality
II-95.Which of the following type A, or coronary-prone, behavioral factors appears to be the
most important?
(A) Hostility
(B) Competitiveness
(C) Time urgency
(D) Explosive speech
(E) Hyperactivity
II-96.Prominent symptoms associated with the psychiatric diagnosis of “adjustment disorder “ in
adults include all the following EXCEPT
(A) substance abuse
(B) anxiety
(C) irritability
(D) depression
(E) physical complaints
II-97.Which of the following methods of assessment would be most useful in the detection of
brain damage?
(A) Thematic apperception test
(B) Bender-Gestalt test
(C) California personality inventory
(D) Minnesota multiphasic personality inventory (MMPI)
(E) Milion behavioral health inventory ( MBHI)
II-98.All the following are basic principles of the neural basis of learning and memory EXCEPT
(A) memory has stages and is continually changing
(B) Long-term memory results in physical changes in the brain
(C) Memory traces are widely distributed throughout the nervous system
(D) The hippocampus and temporal lobes are most actively involved in the human memory
process
(E) Localized trauma can completely destroy stored memory
II-99.A behavior pattern that increases in frequency when followed by a reward is an example of
(A) classical conditioning
(B) shaping
(C) respondent conditioning
(D) operant conditioning
(E) generalization
II-100.In order for operant conditioning to be effectively applied to a psychiatric disorder (e.g.,
shouting obscenities), one can increase positive, constructive behavior by all the following
EXCEPT
(A) precisely defining desired behavior
(B) identifying an effective reinforcer
(C) providing reinforcement when desired behavior is emitted
(D) punishing undesired behavior
(E) exchanging a preferred food for desired behavior
II-101.In operant conditioning, the rate of extinction is most effectively slowed when the
response or learning has been maintained on a reinforcement schedule of
(A) fixed ratio
(B) variable ratio
(C) fixed interval reinforcement
(D) continuous reinforcement
(E) piecework reinforcement
II-102.Learned helplessness is associated with depression in that both are characterized by each
of the following EXCEPT
(A) continued failure from lack of ability
(B) passive behavior
(C) negative expectations
(D) hopelessness
(E) feelings of no control over events
II-103.The idea that experimental extinction, which is produced by non-reiforcement after
classical conditioning, is an active inhibitory process finds support in the phenomenon of
(A) generalization
(B) spontaneous recovery
(C) experimental neurosis
(D) passive avoidance
(E) active avoidance
II-104.All the following factors are critical in both classical and operant conditioning EXCEPT
(A) timing
(B) stimulus discrimination
(C) specific reflex responses
(D) extinction
(E) learning of predictive relationships
II-105.In classical conditioning, the “ partial reinforcement effect” is the
(A) inability to learn with fractional reward
(B) increased response retention following partial reinforcement
(C) increased conditioned response amplitudes after nonreinforced trials
(D) reduced response latencies on nonreinforced trials
(E) contrast effects for partial reinforcement schedules
II-106.A social learning approach to attitude change includes all the following methods EXCEPT
(A) modeling
(B) desensitization
(C) extinction
(D) direct reinforcement
(E) integration of nature (vs. Nurture)
II-107.A major distinction between the methods for producing classical and instrumental
conditioning is that in instrumental conditioning the reinforcing stimulus is
(A) always appetitive in nature
(B) contingent on the behavior to be learned
(C) invariant
(D) solely under the control of the experimenter
(E) unnecessary to produce learning
II-108.Correct statements regarding systematic desensitization include all the following
EXCEPT
(A) it was developed by Joseph Wolpe
(B) it is used to decrease neurotic anxiety or phobia
(C) anxiety-provoking situations are brought to mind to be resolved through reality therapy
(D) anxiety-provoking situations are paired with anxiety-reducing relaxation
(E) the patient is taught a technique of muscular relaxation
II-109.The term learning disabilities most often refers to problems in learning
(A) to do arithmetic
(B) to read
(C) to write compositions
(D) eye-hand coordination
(E) achievement orientation
II-110.The most important component of biofeedback
(A) feelings
(B) information
(C) motivation
(D) attitude
(E) interpersonal relations
II-111.In B.F. Skinner’s view, the study of behavior
(A) should be concerned with the fundamental motives that are found in all organisms
(B) should employ factor-analytic procedures to identify the basic dimensions of personality
(C) must be based entirely on an understanding of classical conditioning
(D) cannot make extrapolations about principles of learning from subhuman species to humans
(E) need not make inferences about unobservable organismic states and inner motives
II-112.Erik Erikson views the stage of young adulthood as being best described by a crisis of
(A) trust versus mistrust
(B) intimacy versus isolation
(C) identity versus role confusion
(D) initiative versus guilt
(E) autonomy versus dependence
II-113.All the following statements about aging are true EXCEPT
(A) the maximal life span has increased in populations over the past 20 years
(B) the risk of death increases exponentially with time
(C) life expectancy would increase only 20 years if heart disease and cancer were eliminated
(D) the biomedical model is becoming increasingly inapplicable in accounting for death in the
elderly
(E) the Vo2max can be used as an integrated measure of the functional limits of the whole body
II-114.The environmental factor with the most underused potential for developing cognitive and
interpersonal competence in children is the
(A) school
(B) family setting
(C) community mental health center
(D) health care system
(E) child welfare agency
II-115.Sequential studies of human development suggest that the growth of intelligence may
continue through
(A) late adolescence
(B) early adulthood
(C) middle adulthood
(D) late adulthood
(E) old age
II-116.In the theory developed by Jean Piaget, the first unit to appear in cognitive development is
(A) language
(B) schema
(C) rules
(D) images
II-117.All the following factors are included in gender identity EXCEPT
(A) gender role behavior
(B) parental and cultural attitudes
(C) external genitalia
(D) sexual behavior
(E) genetic influence
II-118.Which of the following statements about the development of moral standards during
childhood is true?
(A) Only at puberty do a child’s moral standards become independent of external rewards and
punishments
(B) The development of guild as a reaction to transgressions is fostered by parental warmth
(C) Children of 11 to 12 years of age are more likely to make inflexible, absolute moral
judgments than those 7 or 8 years of age
(D) Older children are more likely than younger children to judge behavior as right or wrong in
terms of its reinforcement outcomes
(E) The development of moral reasoning is independent of general intellectual maturation
II-119.Research findings on early gender-role identification and behaviors show that all the
following statements are true EXCEPT
(A) gender-related differences in play behavior are evident as early as 13 months
(B) males are generally more aggressive in their play and problem-solving activities than are
females
(C) children who experience gender reassignment after the age of 2 are considered to be high-
risk candidates for psychological disorders
(D) children between 3 and 4 years of age are able to make gender-appropriate choices according
to Western stereotypes
(E) females 3 to 5 years old appear to be more concerned about gender-appropriate play
activities than are males of a similar age
II-120.In Piaget’s theory of child development, the processes that allow a child to move from one
stage of cognitive development to the next include all the following EXCEPT
(A) reinforcement
(B) representational ability
(C) equilibration
(D) assimilation
(E) accommodation
II-121.Language development in childhood is characterized by which of the following ?
(A) Infants 15 to 20 weeks of age use different patterns of vocalization to identify discomforts
such as hunger, fright, and pain
(B) Most children master all consonant sounds by the age of 3 to 3½ years
(C) The first words spoken are usually verbs
(D) Vowels emerge in hierarchical order between age 3½ and 7 years
(E) None of the above
II-122.Intelligence and cognitive development during adolescence are usually characterized by
each of the following EXCEPT
(A) the emergence of hypothetico-deductive reasoning
(B) attitudes and reasoning that tend to be egocentric
(C) a growing capacity for probabilistic thinking
(D) a type of reasoning that subordinates reality to possibility
(E) less attention to and ability to infer what others are thinking and feeling
II-123.Perinatal gonadal hormones have a development impact on all the following EXCEPT
(A) sex-linked neural differentiation
(B) sexuality in adulthood
(C) neural morphology
(D) the permanent organization of parts of the nervous system
(E) hermaphroditism in genetic males
II-124.The view that leardership is a reciprocal process of social influence with leaders and
followers being influenced by each other is known as
(A) situational leadership
(B) contingency model
(C) social facilitation
(D) collective behavior model
(E) transactional leadership
II-125.Social support provides all the following EXCEPT
(A) a means for interpretation of situations
(B) a good substitute for engaging in health-promoting behaviors
(C) the ability for social comparison and validation
(D) models for behavior
(E) access to significant others
II-126.Persons who have social supports experience all the following results EXCEPT
(A) longer life
(B) less practice of denial
(C) fewer somatic illnesses
(D) more dependency
(E) fewer crises
II-127.Studies on attitude change show that people are LEAST strongly influenced by
(A) facts and information
(B) comparison of their own attitudes and beliefs with those of others
(C) their own personal and social needs
(D) the need to reduce unpleasant motivational states
(E) the attributes of the communicator who is recommending change
II-128.Most mental health care authorities agree that the recent trend toward community-based
treatment of patients who have emotional disorders, as opposed to their incarceration in public
mental institutions, can be ascribed principally to
(A) improved therapeutic results when treatment is available within a patient’s community
(B) the development of preventive measures for various mental illnesses
(C) the use of new drugs that allow many emotionally disturbed patients to function outside an
institution
(D) an increasing willingness by general hospitals to accept mentally disturbed patients
(E) the 1961 report of the Joint Commission on Mental Illness and-Health, which strongly
recommended community mental health programs
II-129.All the following statements about the development of independence during adolescence
are true EXCEPT
(A) sex differences in the age at which independence is achieved tend to be greater in societies
whose economy depends on the male’s physical strength and motor skills (e.g., hunting and
herding versus food-gathering cultures)
(B) compared with the majority of other cultures, independence training in contemporary
America begins relatively early but also is relatively protracted
(C) in general, the shift of parental attitudes toward permissiveness that occurs during
adolescence is greater in father than in mothers
(D) in general, authoritarian parental attitudes are viewed by adolescents as more appropriate in
fathers than in mothers
(E) confidence and self-esteem are enchanced by parental attitudes that encourage autonomy yet
express interest in an adolescent’s behavior and opinions
II-130.Ethnocentrism is the
(A) belief that ethnic groups should remain geograhically segregated
(B) tendency to think that one’s own group or way of life is preferable or superior
(C) belief that ethnic groups should not intermarry
(D) belief that values held by marriage partners should be in accord
(E) belief that multiple cultural practices should be incorporated into marriage and the family
II-131.Risk factors for problem behaviors in adolescence can be identified. All the following
personal or personality factors have a major influence EXCEPT
(A) unconventionality
(B) rebelliousness
(C) high risk-taking
(D) low value on achievement
(E) low value on autonomy
II-132.In studying human development, the remeasurement of a cross-sectional sample of people
after a given fixed interval of time has passed is called
(A) time-lag design
(B) sequential design
(C) multivariate design
(D) cross-sectional design
(E) longitudinal design
II-133.If one is conducting research that requires comparisons of content and material gathered
for certain patients by different interviewers, the best format to use would be one that is
(A) projective
(B) structured
(C) unstructured
(D) analytical
(E) none of the above
II-134.The revised third edition of Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM
III-R) offers an improvement over earlier psychiatric classifications. Its major advantage is that it
(A) identifies mental illness as a disease
(B) deals with predisposing factors
(C) confirms and supports the nosologic system
(D) is an all-inclusive classification system
(E) is a multiaxial classification system
II-135.A sample of a population selected so that each observation or unit has equal chance of
being included is called a
(A) random population parameter
(B) systematic sample
(C) systematic random sample
(D) selected sample
(E) simple random sample
II-136.Two drugs were administered in several different doses, and the effects were measured
and recorded. The data were subjected to regression and correlation analyses .The computed
regression lines and correlation coefficients are presented below. Which of the following
statement is true ?
(A) In general, the strength of the causal relationship between two variables is indicated by the
square of the correlation coefficient
(B) The proportion of variation in response to Drug I accounted for by dose is (0.80)²
(C) The data indicate Drug 1 is more effective than Drug 2
(D) The data indicate Drug 1 is more potent than Drug 2
(E) There is more variability in responses to Drug 1 than to Drug 2
II-137. Which of the following statements about patients with affective disorders is true?
(A) the lifetime prevalence of unipolar disorder is approximately equivalent in men and women
(B) In bipolar disorder, episodes of elevated mood are more common than episodes of depression
(C) The lifetime prevalence of bipolar disorder is approximately equivalent in men and women
(D) Patients with bipolar disorder rarely have relatives with unipolar illness
(E) The concordance rate for unipolar disorder is higher than for bipolar disorder
II-138.Which of the following personality disorders has been linked to alcoholism in relatives?
(A) Histrionic
(B) Borderline
(C) Obsessive-compulsive
(D) Avoidant
(E) Antisocial
II-139.Which of the following statements about the incidence and origins of personality
disorders is true?
(A) high incidence of schizoid personality disorder occurs in families of patients with mood
disorders
(B) High incidence of schizotypal personality disorder occurs in families of patients with mood
disorders
(C) The concordance rate personality disorders is equivalent in monozygotic twins and in
dizygotic twins
(D) Evidence for genetic factors is seen in antisocial personality disorder
II-140.All of the following statements about the genetics of neuropsychiatric disorders are true
EXCEPT
(A) in cri du chat syndrome, part of chromosome 5 is missing
(B) a high concordance rate for Alsheimer’s disease is seen in twins
(C) an anomaly on chromosome 21 has been linked to Alzheimer’s disease
(D) lesch-Nyhan syndrome involves autosomal dominant transmission
(E) there is probably a genetic component in infantile autism
II-141.The second most common genetic cause of mental retardation is
(A) Huntington’s disease
(B) Cri du chat syndrome
(C) Klinefelter’s syndrome
(D) Fragile X syndrome
(E) Lesch-Nyhan syndrome
II-142.A 25 year old male patient sustains a serious head injury in an automobile accident. He
had been aggressive and assaultive, but after the accident he is placid and cooperative. He makes
conditional suggestive gestures and comments and masturbates a great deal. The patient’s injury
is most likely to affect what portion of the brain?
(A) Frontal lobes
(B) Temporal lobes
(C) Parietal lobes
(D) Occipital lobes
(E) Basal ganglia
II-143.Sleep-arousal mechanisms are effected by damage to the
(A) cerebellum
(B) basal ganglia
(C) thalamus
(D) reticular system
(E) amygdala
II-144.Increased pain perception is associated with damage to what area of the brain?
(A) Thalamus
(B) Corpus callosum
(C) Basal ganglia
(D) Reticular system
(E) Hypothalamus
II-145.Parkinson’s disease is associated with damage to what area of the brain?
(A) Cerebellum
(B) Hypothalamus
(C) Basal ganglia
(D) Frontal lobes
(E) Temporal lobes
II-146.What is the major area of the brain implicated in Alzheimer’s disease and amnestic
disorders?
(A) Amyglada
(B) Parietal lobes
(C) Hippocampus
(D) Thalamus
(E) Basal ganglia
II-147.All of the following statements about neurotransmission are true EXCEPT
(A) receptors are proteins in the membranes of neurons
(B) presynaptic receptors bind neurotransmitters
(C) postsynaptic receptors change the ionic condition of membranes
(D) neurotransmitters exert their effects only on postsynaptic neurons
(E) postsynaptic receptors bind neurotransmitters
II-148.Which of the following statements about neurotransmission is true ?
(A) Amino acid neurotransmitters account for 15% of the synapses in the human brain
(B) The biogenic amines are involved in 50% of the synapses in the brain
(C) Dopamine is a second messenger
(D) Diacylglycerol is a second messenger
(E) Reuptake of neurotransmitters by the presynaptic neuron not occur
II-149.Which of the following statements about dopamine is true?
(A) At autopsy, the brains of schizophrenics show decreased numbers of dopamine receptors
(B) Blockade of dopamine receptors results in decreased prolactin levels
(C) Antipsychotic drugs that block postsynaptic dopamine receptors may cause Parkinson-like
symptoms
(D) Dopamine enchances the release of prolactin
(E) Patients with mania show dopamine hypoactivity
II-150.Which of the following statements about GABA is true ?
(A) It is primarily an excitatory neurotransmitter
(B) It is an amino acid neurotransmitter
(C) It mediates postsynaptic inhibition in the CNS
(D) Increased GABA activity has been reported in Huntington’s disease GABA activity is seen
in epilepsy
II-151.All of the following statements about the endogenous opioids are true EXCEPT
(A) They are associated with effects of stress and pain
(B) Alterations in opioid levels may be involved in seizures
(C) They include the enkephalins
(D) They include glutamic acid
(E) Alterations in opioid levels may be involved in alcoholism
II-152.Which of the following neuropeptides has been implicated in the pathology of
schizophrenia?
(A) Somatostatin
(B) Neurotensin
(C) Substance P
(D) Vasopressin
(E) Vasoactive intestinal peptide
II-153.The left hemisphere of the brain is thought to be associated with which one of the
following functions?
(A) Perception of social cues
(B) Musical ability
(C) Spatial relations
(D) Language
(E) Facial recognition
II-154.All of the following structures connect the two cerebral hemispheres EXCEPT
(A) the corpus callosum
(B) the anterior commissur
(C) the hippocampal commissure
(D) the posterior commissure
(E) the amygdala
II-155.Which of the following statements about neurotransmitters and their metabolites is true?
(A) MHPG levels in urine are increased in patients with severe depressive disorders
(B) MHPG is increased in the cerebrospinal fluid of patients who have attempted suicide
(C) 5-HIIA is decreased in aggressive, violent individuals
(D) MHPG is a metabolite of serotonin
(E) VMA is a metabolite of serotonin
II-156.Blockade of H2 receptors is associated primarily with
(A) depression
(B) weight gain
(C) increased anxiety
(D) epilepsy
II-157.Degeneration of cholinergic neurons is involved primarily
(A) mania
(B) depression
(C) movement disorders
(D) anxiety
(E) sleep disorders
II-158.Which of the following statements about monoamines and their metabolites is true?
(A) Mania is associated with dopamine hypoactivity
(B) Free dopamine is metabolozed by 5-HIIA
(C) There is more plasma monoamine oxidase (MAO) in unmedicated schizophrenics than in
controls
(D) There is no association between levels of MHPG and suicidal behavior
(E) Decreased HVA is seen with clinical improvement in patients treated with neuroleptics
II-159.The antipsychotic drug producing the greatest sedative effect is
(A) haloperidol
(B) chlorpromazine
(C) perphenazine
(D) thioridazine
(E) thrifluoperazine
II-160.A 45-years-old male employed as an air traffic controller presents for treatment of
depression. Which of the following heterocyclic agents is least likely to cause sedation in this
patient ?
(A) Desipramine
(B) Imipramine
(C) Amitriptyline
(D) Doxepin
(E) Amoxapine
II-161.Which of the following statements about the characteristics of tardive dyskinesia is true?
(A) It is more common in men than in women
(B) It includes abnormal movements of the tongue
(C) It usually occurs within 3 months of beginning drug treatment
(D) It occurs more often in treatment using clozapine than treatment using other antipsychotic
agents
(E) It is a consequence of antidepressant drug treatment
II-162.Parkinsonian symptoms are associated mainly with which one of the following
antidepressants?
(A) Desipramine
(B) Imipramine
(C) Amitriptyline
(D)Amoxapine
(E) Nortriptyline
II-163.Which of the following statements about electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is true?
(A) The most common indication is in the treatment of schizophrenia
(B) It involves induction of a generalized seizure
(C) It is associated with considerable risk
(D) It is an effective treatment for anxiety
(E) Maximum response is usually seen after two to four treatments
II-164.Which of the following statements about the characteristics of antidepressant agents is
true?
(A) They structurally resemble the anxiolytic agents
(B) They frequently induce euphoria in nondepressed patients
(C) They rarely have antcholinergic effects
(D) The heterocyclics block reuptake of serotonin at the synapse
(E) Acommon side effect of heterocyclic agents is weight loss
II-165.Which one of the following statements about MAO inhibitors is true?
(A) The inhibition of MAO is reversible
(B) MAO inhibitors are used to treat depression
(C) Adverse effects of MAO inhibitors are distinct from those of heterocyclic agents
(D) MAO-Bs are more likely than MAO-As to cause a hypertensive crisis
II-166.A patient with bipolar disorder is being treated with lithium. Which adverse effect is this
patient least likely to experience?
(A) Cardiac conduction abnormalities
(B) Gastric distress
(C) Tremor
(D) Mild cognitive impairment
(E) Food allergy
II-167.Antipsychotic agents are usually associated with all of the following adverse effects
EXCEPT
(A) orthostatic hypotension
(B) dry mouth
(C) amenorrhea
(D) weight loss
(E) breast enlargement
II-168.Which of the following antipsychotic agents is least likely to cause parkinsonian effect?
(A) Chlorpromazine
(B) Haloperidol
(C) Perphenazine
(D) Trifluoperazine
(E) Pimozide
II-169.The major method used to investigate the unconscious mental processes of a patient in
psychoanalysis is
(A) symbolism
(B) repression
(C) free association*
(D) Primary process
(E) Examination of the preconscious
II-170.All of the following statements about defense mechanisms are true EXCEPT
(A) they are used to keep conflicts out of consciousness
(B) they are unconscious mental techniques
(C) they decrease anxiety
(D) they are always manifestations of immature functioning *
(E) they help maintain an individual’s sense of self-esteem
II-171.Which of the following defense mechanisms is seen in a patient who exhibits multiple
personalities?
(A) Repression
(B) Displacement
(C) Dissociation
(D) Isolation
(E) Intellectualization
II-172.A physician who has been given a diagnosis of terminal pancreatic cancer constantly
discusses the technical aspects of his case with many of the other physicians in the hospital. This
is an example of which one of the following defense mechanisms?
(A) Repression
(B) Displacement
(C) Dissociation
(D) Regression
(E) Intellectualization
II-173.The defense mechanism used when unacceptable feelings are prevented from reaching
awareness is known as
(A) repression
(B) regression
(C) displacement
(D) rationalization
(E) isolation of affect
II-174.Which of the following defense mechanisms is classified as the most mature?
(A) Sublimation
(B) Repression
(C) Rationalization
(D) Projection
(E) Regression
II-175.A previously toilet-trained child is hospitalized and begins wetting the bed again. This is
an example of
(A) isolation of affect
(B) displacement
(C) projection
(D) regression
(E) denial
II-176.All of the following statements concerning psychoanalysis are true EXCEPT
(A) the therapist plays an active role
(B) treatment is usually conducted 4 times/week
(C) treatment is usually conducted for 3-4 years
(D) inhibition of free association is called resistance
(E) resistance blocks unconscious ideas that are unacceptable to the conscious mind
II-177.A patient’s reexperiencing of feelings about the parent with the therapist during
psychoanalysis is known as
(A) interference
(B) resistance
(C) association
(D) transference
(E) cognitive dissonance
II-178.Which of the following statements correctly describes aspects of Freud’s structural theory
of the mind?
(A) The id is conscious
(B) The mind is divided into the preconscious and conscious
(C) The superego is unconscious
(D) The id is closely associated with reality
(E) The ego is under the domination of primary process thinking
II-179.Which of the following is a function of the superego?
(A) Maintaining relationships to the outside world
(B) Reality testing
(C) Maintaining object relationships
(D) Controlling secondary process thinking
(E) Controlling id impulses
II-180.All of the following elements of classical conditioning must be learned EXCEPT
(A) the conditioned response
(B) the unconditioned response
(C) the conditioned stimulus
(D) the acquisition phase
(E) stimulus generalization
II-181.Which of the following schedules of reinforcement is most resistant to extinction?
(A) Continuous
(B) Fixed ratio
(C) Fixed interval
(D) Variable ratio
(E) Discontinued
II-182.A child who likes and looks up to her physician states that she wants to become a doctor
when she grows up. This behavior is an example of
(A) stimulus generalization
(B) modeling
(C) shaping
(D) positive reinforcement
(E) variable reinforcement
II-183.All of the following statements about learning are true EXCEPT
(A) learning involves the acquisition of behavior patterns
(B) classical conditioning is a method of learning
(C) operant conditioning is a method of learning
(D) history of the individual is important in all forms of learning
(E) stimuli may be internal or external to the individual
II-184.A 2-year-old child is afraid of nurses in white uniforms. When his grandmother comes to
visit him wearing a white jacket, he begins to cry. The best explanation for this phenomenon is
(A) stimulus generalization
(B) habit
(C) instrumental conditioning
(D) learning by trial and error
(E) an emitted operant
II-185.Which of the following statements about reinforcement in operant conditioning is true ?
(A) It establishes a connection between a stimulus and a response
(B) It can only be positive
(C) It decreases the rate at which a behavior occurs
(D) It precedes a behavior
(E) It was first described by the work of Pavlov
II-186.All of the following statements about biofeedback are true EXCEPT
(A) it is based on classical conditioning
(B) it has been used in the treatment of generalized anxiety disorder
(C) control over physiologic activity is learned
(D) it can be used to control autonomic activity
(E) relaxation of striated muscle can be achieved
II-187.All of the following factors are important in the successful use of biofeedback EXCEPT
(A) the patient must receive continuous information about the physical parameter
(B) the physical parameter must be detectable and measurable
(C) the patient’s motivation is important
(D) it is used to gain control over the central nervous system
(E) a large amount of practice is required
II-188.Although a mother slaps a child on the hand every time she touches a stove, the child
begins to touch the stove more frequently. This is an example of
(A) punishment
(B) negative reinforcement
(C) positive reinforcement
(D) aversive conditioning
(E) classical conditioning
II-189.Which of the following statements concerning narcolepsy is true?
(A) The REM sleep of a narcoleptic person is abnormal
(B) Narcolepsy occurs in approximately 50 out of every 10,000 persons
(C) Narcolepsy occurs most frequently in the elderly
(D) Sedatives are used to treat narcolepsy
(E) Cataplexy rarely occurs
II-190.Which neurotransmitter is particularly involved in creasing of REM sleep?
(A) Serotonin
(B) Norepinephrine
(C) Acetylcholine (ACh)
(D) Dopamine
(E) Histamine
II-191.Which of the following is characteristic of a patient in REM sleep?
(A) Hyperactivity of skeletal muscles
(B) Decreased blood pressure
(C) Penile and clitoral erection
(D) Decreased brain oxygen use
(E) Decreased pulse
II-192.Which of the following signs is characteristic of a patient in non-REM sleep?
(A) Paralysis of skeletal muscles
(B) Descreased blood pressure
(C) Increased pulse
(D) Increased respiration
(E) Agitation
II-193.A patient who is suffering from major depression has sleep problems. Which of the
following is likely to be found in this patient?
(A) Increased slow wave sleep
(B) Lengthened REM latency
(C) Reduced percentage of REM sleep
(D) Shift in REM from last to first part of the night
(E) Short first REM period
II-194.All of the following statements about hypersomnia are true EXCEPT
(A) it is associated with narcolepsy
(B) it is associated with sleep apnea
(C) it is associated with withdrawal of CNS stimulants
(D) it is seen frequently in patients with mania
(E) it includes complaints about somnolence
II-195.Slow wave sleep is characterized by
(A) penile erection
(B) dreaming
(C) night terrors
(D) total recall of the arousal
(E) increased brain oxygen use
II-196.Which of the following statements about sleep is true?
(A) Patients with Alzheimer’s disease have increased slow wave sleep
(B) Drugs that decrease brain dopamine produce wakefulness
(C) Patients with Alzheimer’s disease have reduced REM sleep
(D) Dopamine blockers decrease sleep time
(E) Increased noradrenergic activity is associated with increased REM sleep
II-197.Which of the following statements about patients with insomnia is most likely to be true?
(A) It occurs in less than 5% of the population
(B) It has little effect on daytime functioning
(C) It is rarely associated with anxiety
(D) It may be an early sign of severe depression
(E) It must occur daily for at least 6 months to be to be diagnosed as insomnia
II-198.Which of the following is characteristic of sleep in a person age 79?
(A) Increased total sleep time
(B) Decreased REM sleep
(C) Decreased sleep latency
(D) Increased stage 3 sleep
(E) Increased stage 4 sleep
II-199.Which of the following is used to test intelligence in children?
(A) Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
(B) Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory (MMPI)
(C) Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Revised (WISC-R)
(D) Halstead –Reitan Battery (HRB)
II-200.An individual with a mental age of 8 and a chronological age of 10 has an IQ of
(A) 40
(B) 60
(C) 80
(D) 100
(E) 180
1. In classical conditioning (A)
a. subject is passive
b. responses are typically autonomic or emotional
c. continued pairings of a CS with UCS strengthen conditioned responses
d. responses are usually voluntary
6. Principles that describe how the perceptual system organizes stimuli include: (e)
1. proximity
2. similarity
3. continuity
4. closure
1. motor skills
2. emotional events
3. intuitive cognitive skills
4. factual knowledge
9. The following are true regarding Serotinergic system and memory (e)
1. being female
2. being a twin
3. shortened second-stage labour
4. larger family size
1. unconscious
2. preconscious
3. conscious
4. id
12. The trait theories make the following basic assumptions: (a)
13. The following are true regarding Long-term potentiation (LTP) (a)
14. The following are true regarding Evoked brain potentials (a)
1. the evoked brain potential is a small, temporary change in voltage on an EEG that
occurs in response to specific events
2. there is a negative peak (N100) followed by a large positive peak (P300)
3. the exact timing of P300 is sensitive to factors that alter the speed of perceptual
processes
4. the evoked brain potential is a large, temporary change in voltage on an EEG that
occurs in response to non-specific events
1. reliable
2. efficient
3. dependable
4. moody
16. The “big-five “ model of personality includes the following dimensions: (e)
18. Hungers for different types of food seem to be related to the action of
different neurotransmitters on PVN neurons (e)
1. confronting
2. seeking social support
3. planful problem solving
4. distancing
1. self-controlling”
2. distancing
3. positive reappraisal
4. accepting responsibility
22. Stress-related health problems are more common among people who: a
1. mental representations
2. object permanence
3. primary circular reactions
4. secondary circular reactions
1. poor growth
2. developmental language delay
3. indiscriminate affection seeking
4. affectionate relationship
1. smiling
2. brow flash response
3. expressions of joy, anger, fear, disgust
4. previous learning for expression
1. cognitive (beliefs)
2. affective (feelings)
3. behavioral (actions)
4. physiological
37. Obstruction b
1. consists of irregular hindrance and sudden arrest of fluent movement, like a spoke stuck
in a wheel
2. consists of slow arrest of fluenent movement
3. is seen in catatonia
4. is usually seen in OCD
1. abnormal,
2. repetitive,
3. goal-directed movements
4. commonly seen in chronic delusional disorder
1. echolalia
2. palilalia
3. echopraxia
4. logoclonia
1. hyperaesthesias
2. hypoaesthesias
3. changes in quality
4. dysmegalopsia
1. illusions
2. hallucinations
3. pseudohallucinations
4. delusions
1. schizophrenia
2. temporal lobe epilepsy
3. lithium carbonate
4. disulfiram
1. depressive illness
2. OCD
3. temporal lobe epilepsy (in 30%)
4. delusional disorder
1. depression
2. hysterical pseudodementia
3. panic disorder
4. Organic brain disease
1. epilepsy
2. mental retardation
3. obsessional personality
4. schizoid personality
1. splitting
2. primitive idealization
3. feeling of emptiness
4. euphoric affect
1. impotence
2. diarrhea
3. constipation
4. hypoventilation
1. grandiose ideas
2. good interpersonal relationships
3. lack of guilt
4. flashbacks
1. causes hydronephrosis
2. causes severe mental retardation
3. causes cleft lip and palate
4. is associated with liver abnormalities
1. jamais vu
2. delesional perception
3. derealization
4. visiual hallucinations
1. occur in hysteria
2. may be seen under hypnosis
3. include fugue states
4. exclude multiple personalties
62. Pseudohallucinations:D
1. Korsakoff's psychosis
2. mamillary body lesions
3. thalamic lesions
4. uncomplicated psychosis
1. Tectum
2. Basis Pedunculi
3. Tegmentum
4. hypothalamus
1. Oculomotor nerves F
2. Crura cerebri F
3. Optic nerves F
4. Cerebral hemispheres T
1. Amygdaloid nucleus T
2. Dentate nucleus F
3. Caudate nucleus T
4. Subthalamic nucleus
F
70. Weaknesses for cohort studies include: e
72 . HIV infection b
1. is greatly feared by the culture in which we live.
2. is commonly transmitted by such body fluids as saliva, tears, or urine
3. has infected between 20 and 60 % of all onmonogamous sexually active gay
men in the United States
4. can cause depression but does not cause dementia
73. Non-parametric methods a
74. The following are differences between illness and disease: disease d
75. . The following factors can play a role in shaping the course of an illness e
79. Punishment b
1. is an aversive stimulus
2. is a long term effective deterrent to aggressive behavior
3. reduces the probability of a behavior’s recurring in the short run
4. is a negative reinforcement
80. Placebos b
1. oestrogen
2. early experience of the mother
3. progesterone
4. characteristics of the neonate
1. peristalsis
2. salivary secretion
3. micturition
4. sweating
85. Catecholamines c
1. include acetylcholine
2. are synthesized from phenylalanine
3. include serotonin
4. are monoamines
1. perseveration
2. retrograde amnesia
3. hyperreflexia
4. dyscalculia
1. hypothyroidism
2. cataract
3. coarse tremor
4. ileus
1. festinant gait
2. ipsilateral dysdiadochokinesia
3. bradykinesia
4. ipsilateral intention tremor
1. Hypothalamus
2. TRH
3. Noradrenaline
4. 5-HT
100. Narcolepsy: e
1. Commonly involves sleep paralysis
2. Hypnagogic hallucinations are common
3. The condition often runs in families
4. REM latency at night is frequently seen