People who score higher on the Sensation Seeking Scale (SSS) are more likely to engage in daydreams
Indicate whether the statement is true or false.
ANS: T
FEEDBACK: People who score higher on the Sensation Seeking Scale (SSS) tend to engage in what Sigmund Freud called primary-process thought. They may have images, dreams, and daydreams so vivid that the distinction blurs between these internal stimuli and the real world. Zuckerman suggested that because high sensation seekers continually search for novel experiences, if they cannot find them in external situations they may look inward and create a fantasy world.
You might also like to view...
A researcher wants to compare the use of rating scales to behavioral coding systems. After making the comparison, he concludes that behavioral coding systems tend to
a. be less reliable. b. be more qualitative. c. require more subjective judgment. d. require less inference by the observer.
Spatial working memory takes place in the ________________
a. superior colliculus c. prefrontal cortex b. thalamus d. brain regions supporting a certain location