Understanding Media Psychology,
1st Edition by Gayle S. Stever
Complete Chapter Test Bank
are included (Ch 1 to 14)
** Immediate Download
** Swift Response
** All Chapters included
,Table of Contents are given below
1.Media and Media Psychology
2.Key Theories and Concepts from Media Psychology
3.Research Methods
4.Positive Psychology, Moral Reasoning, and Prosocial Behavior
5.Social Justice and the Media: Gender, Class, and Disability
6.Social Justice and the Media: Race, Ethnicity, and Religion
7.Aliens Eating Reese’s: Media Influence and Advertising
8.Propaganda, Fake News, and Deepfaking
9.Processes of Audience Involvement
10.Dark Media: Violence, Pornography, and Addiction
11.Join the Adventure: The Psychology of Gaming
12.The Social Nature of Media
13.The Turbulent 20s: Covid-19 and the Media
14.The Future of Media
,The test bank is organized in reverse order, with the last chapter displayed first, to ensure that all
chapters are included in this document. (Complete Chapters included Ch14-1)
Chapter 14 Questions:
1. Cyberpsychology
a. Is a subject that involves the study of technology alone.
b. Will probably replace media psychology.
c. Is human interaction with digital technology.
d. Is not meaningfully distinct from media psychology.
e. B and D are true.
f. C and D are true.
2. Media Psychology
a. Was already a distinct discipline 75 years ago.
b. Is distinctive from Communication is its overt orientation to
psychological theory.
c. Fails to have its own journals and books.
d. None of these is true.
3. It is clear while reading this chapter that
a. Media Psychology is easily distinguished from other disciplines.
b. There is clear agreement among scholars as to the status of media
psychology.
c. Media psychology’s future is to see it as constantly changing and
adapting to new theories.
d. All of these are true.
4. The issues that are of concern to media psychologists
a. Are constantly changing.
b. Have been the same since the beginning of television in the 1950s.
c. Are the same as those of other disciplines.
d. Have little relationship to other disciplines.
, 5. A problem with current media psychology research is
a. 65 per cent of the published studies used a single example to stand for
such general phenomena as ‘TV entertainment’ or ‘negative content’.
b. ‘Fake news’ is ultimately a media construct, and to study it as if it
were a robust scientific phenomenon is problematic.
c. It has imbedded in its assumptions the third person effect, treating the
audience as more influenced by media than the researchers
themselves.
d. These are all true.