Skip to main content
English Practice Exam
Practice TestsExam GuidesPricing
Log inSign up
English Practice Exam

Free practice tests to help you succeed in your English proficiency exams.

Quick Links

  • Home
  • Practice Tests
  • Pricing

Legal

  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Service
  • Contact Us

Other Languages

EnglishالعربيةবাংলাFrançaisગુજરાતીहिन्दीBahasa Indonesia日本語한국어Bahasa Melayu普通话नेपालीPortuguês (Brasil)ਪੰਜਾਬੀEspañolภาษาไทยTiếng Việt

© 2025 English Practice Exam. All rights reserved.

Website by S-Block TechnologiesS-Block Technologies

2 free practice tests remainingGo Pro

  1. Home
  2. /
  3. PTE
  4. /
  5. PTE Academic
  6. /
  7. Reading
  8. /
  9. Practice Test
PTE AcademicReading

Multiple Choice, Single Answer

Read the text and answer the multiple-choice question by selecting the correct response. Only one response is correct.

What Replication Teaches Social Psychology

social psychology studies
Social psychology is often introduced through striking findings about conformity, prejudice, and helping behavior. Yet in recent years, the field has also become known for a different reason: debates about whether influential results can be reproduced when studies are repeated. This discussion is not merely about catching errors; it is about clarifying what kinds of evidence should guide claims about human social behavior. Large-scale replication projects have shown that some classic effects appear reliably, while others shrink or disappear under tighter methods. For example, studies that rely on subtle “priming” procedures sometimes produce weaker outcomes when researchers pre-register hypotheses, use larger samples, and standardize materials across laboratories. At the same time, replications suggest that context matters more than many early papers implied. Cultural norms, the perceived status of the experimenter, and even the online versus in-person setting can alter how participants interpret social cues. These results do not mean that social psychology is failing. Rather, they indicate that social behavior is sensitive to boundary conditions and that single studies rarely provide a final answer. A more cumulative approach—combining replications, meta-analyses, and transparent reporting—helps distinguish robust patterns from effects that depend on narrow circumstances. In this way, replication serves as a corrective and a guide, pushing the field toward conclusions that are both more cautious and more credible.

According to the passage, which of the following is true?

← Back to all Multiple Choice, Single Answer testsView all PTE Academic sections

Also practice for:

CambridgeIELTSTOEFLTOEIC