Neuroscience & Foundations
Perception & Attention
Working & Long-Term Memory
Memory Errors & Knowledge
Imagery & Language
100

Which pioneer used the Savings Method with nonsense syllables to quantify the forgetting curve?

Hermann Ebbinghaus

100

The process by which small components are put together to form a whole; often called data-driven processing.

Bottom-up processing

100

The phenomenon where it is easier to remember items at the end of a list because they are still in STM.

Recency effect

100

Bartlett's "War of the Ghosts" showed that we use cultural frameworks to rebuild memories. What is the term for these frameworks?

Schemas

100

While syntax deals with rules and structure, what is the term for the system that deals with the "meaning" of words?

Semantics

200

The concept that specific functions are served by specific areas of the brain (e.g., FFA for faces).

Localization of function

200

The effect where people take longer to name a color of ink when the word spells a different color.

Stroop effect

200

In Baddeley’s model, the component that coordinates the activity of the other slave systems.

Central executive

200

A member of a category that is a "standard" representation, formed by averaging all members encountered.

Prototype

200

What is the name of the mental task where participants decide if two 3D blocks are the same by rotating them in their mind?

Mental rotation

300

The idea that a single neuron can represent a specific complex object (e.g., your grandmother's face).

Specificity coding (Grandmother cell)

300

What is the term for the process by which features such as color, form, and motion are combined to create our perception of a coherent object?

Binding

300

The finding that memory is better if the physical environment during encoding matches the environment during retrieval.

Encoding specificity

300

The tendency for witnesses to be influenced by misleading info provided after they observe a crime.

Misinformation effect

300

The system of rules that determines how words are combined into phrases and sentences.

Syntax

400

A technique that uses magnetic fields to measure the oxygen level in the blood to track brain activity.

fMRI (Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging)

400

A visual search task where the target differs from distractors by a combination of two or more features.

Conjunction search

400

The process of transforming a memory from a fragile, new state to a more permanent, stable state.

Consolidation

400

The finding that "high-prototypical" members of a category are named first when listing items (e.g., Apple for Fruit).

Typicality effect
400

What is the term for the representation in which different parts of an image can be described as corresponding to specific locations in space?

Spatial representation

500

If the intensity of a stimulus increases, the size of the action potential stays the same. What is the only thing that increases?

Firing rate (Rate firing)

500

The "Where/How" pathway in the brain, which leads from the striate cortex to the parietal lobe.

Dorsal pathway

500

Memory for specific personal experiences, which involves "mental time travel" back to a specific time/place.

Episodic memory

500

In a semantic network, the process where activity at one node leads to activation of nearby, related nodes.

Spreading activity

500

The mental process where we shift our focus from one part of a mental image to another, showing it takes time.

Mental scanning

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