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State what the number-of-examples theory proposes about how individuals make self-judgments, and identify the competing psychological model it is typically contrasted with.

Question: State what the number-of-examples theory proposes about how individuals make self-judgments, and identify the competing psychological model it is typically contrasted with.

Sample answer: The number-of-examples theory proposes that when individuals make self-judgments, such as evaluating their own level of assertiveness, they base their evaluation on the sheer quantity of relevant examples they can bring to mind. This model is often contrasted with the ease-of-retrieval theory.

Key points:

  • Judgments are based on the sheer quantity of relevant examples recalled.
  • Applies specifically to self-judgments or self-evaluations, such as assertiveness.
  • Identifies the ease-of-retrieval theory as the contrasting theory.

Rubric: Full credit is awarded if the response accurately defines the theory as basing self-judgments on the sheer quantity of examples recalled and explicitly names the ease-of-retrieval theory as the contrasting model. Partial credit is given for omitting the contrasting theory or providing an incomplete definition.

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Updated 2026-05-27

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Research Methods in Psychology - 4th American Edition @ KPU

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