hss.iitd.ac.in PhD Entrance Exam Psychology Question Paper : Indian Institute of Technology Humanities & Social Sciences
Organization : Indian Institute of Technology
Department : Humanities and Social Sciences
Exam : PhD Entrance Examination
Subject : Psychology
Document Type : Previous Year Question Paper
Website : https://hss.iitd.ac.in/
Download Model/Sample Question Paper :
General : https://www.pdfquestion.in/uploads/23715-General.pdf
Psychology : https://www.pdfquestion.in/uploads/23721-Psy.pdf
IITD PhD Psychology Entrance Exam Question Paper
Total Marks: 100;
Duration: 2 hours
Related : Indian Institute of Technology Humanities & Social Sciences PhD Entrance Exam English Question Paper : www.pdfquestion.in/23715.html
Section A
** 30 MARKS ONLY
** In this section, you are required to read a passage and answer a few questions based on it.
** Answer any ONE of the TWO questions (Question 1 or Question 2) given below : 30 Marks only
Test On General Comprehension
Question 1 :
Passage :
“Philosophic contemplation, when it is unalloyed, does not aim at proving that the rest of the universe is akin to man. All acquisition of knowledge is an enlargement of the Self, but this enlargement is best attained when it is not directly sought. It is obtained when the desire for knowledge is alone operative, by a study which does not wish in advance that its objects should have this or that character, but adapts the Self to the characters which it finds in its objects.
Please answer the following:
1a.What kind of “pursuit of knowledge” is said by Russell to contribute to the “enlargement of Self” in the above passage? (Approximately 50 words)
1b.How does Russell contrast “Knowledge of Self-assertion” with “Knowledge as Contemplation” in the above passage? (Approximately 50 words)
Question 2 :
Passage :
One of the underrated pleasures of living in a city is anonymity —guaranteed not by the fact that you look the same as everyone else but that no one really cares that you look different. And a truly cosmopolitan city is one in which everyone looks different.
I have been fortunate that for the 30 or so years that I have lived in Bangalore I have not had to deal with the fact that I look different. Save for occasional reminders of my Chineseness, the city has given me enough space to be who I am — cinephile, bibliophile, foodie — without having to bother too much about questions of identity.
The need of the hour is to contain this spillover effect. Politicians of all shades and the media have to recognise the vital role that they play in diffusing the situation rather than inflaming it. Rumours and riots have always been insidiously linked to each other and we have no choice but to deal with the situation before us with utmost care and responsibility. Centuries of immigrant struggles have won us the right to say that a city can belong to us even if we do not belong to the city. And if we do not care of what belongs to us, we will run the danger of losing it.
(This is an article written by Lawrence Liang that appeared in the Hindu on August 18, 2012).
Please answer the following : (Approximately 50 words for each answer).
2a How did the events of August 2012 change Liang’s perception of Bangalore? Please take the entire piece into account before writing.
2b The writer suspects that the host-guest metaphor may not be suitable for a city claiming cosmopolitan status. What might he mean by this? Can you explain in your own words?
2c What sort of danger seems most pressing and terrible to the writer?
Section B
Candidates: 70 MARKS
Research Aptitude Test
Question 1: Several studies have shown that wealth may be at odds with empathy and compassion. Research published in the journal Psychological Science also found that people of lower economic status were better at reading others’ facial expressions — an important marker of empathy — than wealthier people.
The authors state, “A lot of what we see is a baseline orientation for the lower class to be more empathetic and the upper class to be less [so]”. In what other psychologically meaningful ways do you think money changes the way we think?
Question 2: Devise a research study to test the relationship between IQ and academic achievement in IIT? (Pease provide a research design) or
Design a study on: Effect of Meditation/yoga programme on well-being in Older Adults or Effect of school intervention programme on well-being in Indian students
Question 3: A few months back, Facebook made either negative or positive emotions more prevalent in users’ News Feeds, and measured how this affected users’ emotionally expressive behaviors, as indicated by users’ own posts. Results of the study are presented graphically – draw key interpretations from the results.
Question 10 : A longitudinal study followed babies born in the month of March, 1998. When they were 7 and again when they were 11, their teachers were asked to describe the children physically.
The children were defined to be attractive if they were described as attractive at both age 7 and age 11. They were defined to be unattractive otherwise. Their intelligence was
measured with 11 different cognitive tests at three different ages (7, 11, and 16). What implications do you draw from the results that are presented below?