Perception
Problem-Solving
Memory Systems and Encoding
Retrieval and Forgetting
Intelligence and Testing
100

This type of processing begins with sensory input and builds up to perception. 

What is bottom-up processing?

100

A mental category used to group similar objects, ideas, or people.

What is a concept?

100

This brain structure is critical for forming new explicit memories.

What is the hippocampus?

100

Retrieving information without cues is called this.

What is recall?

100

This is the letter referring to intelligence as a single general ability.

What is g.

200

This Gestalt principle explains why we tend to group nearby objects together.

What is proximity?

200

This problem-solving method guarantees a solution but is often slow.

What is an algorithm?

200

This type of memory includes facts and general knowledge.

What is semantic memory?

200

When older information interferes with learning new information.

What is proactive interference?

200

The ability to solve new problems quickly is called this type of intelligence.

What is fluid intelligence?

300

Failing to notice a fully visible but unexpected object is called this.

What is inattentional blindness?

300

Believing something is more common because it easily comes to mind is this heuristic.

What is the availability heuristic?

300

Repeating information to keep it in short-term memory is called this.

What is maintenance rehearsal?

300

The type of amnesia in which you are unable to form new memories.

What is anterograde amnesia?
300

A that accurately predicts what it claims to predict is said to have this.

What is predictive validity?

400

Explain the difference between retinal disparity and convergence as depth cues.

Retinal disparity refers to the slightly different images each eye sees, while convergence refers to how much the eyes turn inward to focus on an object.

400

A person continues investing in a failing project because they’ve already put time and money into it. This is called what?

What is the sunk cost fallacy?

400

It is easier to remember 456-34-7634 than 456347634 because of this phenomenon. 

What is chunking?

400

After hearing misleading details about an event, a witness recalls the incorrect information as true. This is what?

What is the misinformation effect?

400
The phenomenon describing the fact that IQ test scores have been rising for the past century all over the world. 

What is the Flynn Effect?

500

You’re told to expect to see a “duck,” and you interpret an ambiguous image as a duck instead of a rabbit. This is due to what?

What is a perceptual set?

500

A person insists on solving a math problem the same old way, even though a simpler method exists. This demonstrates what?

What is mental set?

500

Thinking about the number of sound of a word while you encode it is called what?

What is phonemic encoding?

500

Johnny remembers a news story about person eating a bicycle, but he forgets that it came from a satirical magazine exemplifying this phenomenon.

What is source amnesia?

500

A student performs worse on a test after being reminded of a negative stereotype about their group. This is what?

What is stereotype threat?

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