Who was the confederate in Milgram's study of obedience in the 1960s?
a) the naïve subject
b) Milgram himself
c) the teacher
d) the learner
Answer: d
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Your child drew a picture of his school playground on a large sheet of white paper. At the top of this page, he or she drew the school building,
while the playground equipment, including seesaws and swings, were drawn toward the bottom of the picture. There is a tree near the entrance to the school. The trunk of this tree is blocking a portion of the windows by the main doorway to the school.There is a road beginning at the bottom of the page whose parallel lines grow closer together as the road passes the school. The children that your child drew near the bottom of the page appear larger than the children playing nearer the school. These "larger" children also are drawn with more detail, while the faces of the children playing closer to the school are blurry. Describe the pictorial cues that this "artist" used to achieve depth. What will be an ideal response?
Research on the biology of memory involving the visual cortex of rats reared in stimulating environments and the stimulation of certain synapses in sea snails suggests that:
A) the engram is generalized throughout the entire cortex. B) myelination is not critical to memory formation in the brain. C) neurotransmitters have no role to play in memory processes. D) neural events may be involved in memory.