Memory systems
Memory processes
Types of Long-term memory
Forgetting and distortion
Intelligence and testing
100

This initial stage of memory registers sensory information for only a few seconds before it fades.

What is sensory memory?

100

The process of getting information into memory.

What is encoding?

100

Memories of facts and experiences that you can consciously declare.

What are explicit memories?

100

A condition in which someone cannot form new memories after an injury.

What is anterograde amnesia?

100

Charles Spearman proposed that this general intelligence factor underlies all mental abilities.

What is the g factor?

200

This type of memory holds about 7 ± 2 bits of information briefly before it’s stored or forgotten.

What is short-term memory?

200

The process of maintaining information over time.

What is storage?

200

Memory that happens automatically, such as skills and conditioned responses.

What is implicit memory?

200

When newly learned information interferes with recalling old information.

What is retroactive interference?

200

The chronological age that most typically corresponds to a given level of test performance.

What is mental age?

300

This system actively processes information in short-term storage, combining new info with old.

What is working memory?

300

The process of getting information out of memory storage.

What is retrieval?

300

Memory for general knowledge, concepts, and meanings of words.

What is semantic memory?

300

When misleading information gets incorporated into a person’s memory of an event.

What is the misinformation effect?

300

The type of intelligence that involves accumulated knowledge and skills.

What is crystallized intelligence?

400

This memory system has a virtually limitless capacity and can last a lifetime.

What is long-term memory?

400

Retrieving information without any cues, as on a fill-in-the-blank test.

What is recall?

400

Memory of personally experienced events.

What is episodic memory?

400

A condition in which someone cannot recall old memories from before an injury.

What is retrograde amnesia?

400

The extent to which a test measures what it is intended to measure.

What is content validity?

500

This brief visual sensory memory allows you to recall an image for a fraction of a second.

What is iconic memory?

500

Identifying information that you’ve already learned, as on a multiple-choice test.

What is recognition?

500

Vivid, emotionally charged memories of significant events (like 9/11).

What is flashbulb memory?

500

When old information interferes with learning new information.

What is proactive interference?

500

The type of intelligence that involves reasoning, problem-solving, and abstract thinking.

What is fluid intelligence?

M
e
n
u