This principle lets us see objects as complete despite missing parts.
What is closure?
Perception relying on sensory input rather than prior knowledge.
What is bottom up processing?
A step-by-step procedure that guarantees solving a problem.
What is an algorithm?
This memory system stores external input briefly before it’s forgotten or passed to short-term memory.
What is sensory memory?
Sarah recently changed her phone number but keeps accidentally giving out her old number to new acquaintances, even though she’s been trying to memorize the new one.
What is proactive interference?
While driving, you don’t notice a new billboard because your attention is focused on traffic.
What is inattentional blindness?
Frameworks that shape our perceptions based on prior experiences.
What are schemas?
A student sticks to their original incorrect answer.
What is belief perseverence?
This type of implicit memory helps us with skills and performing everyday tasks.
What is procedural memory?
After learning a new locker combination this semester, Jake can no longer remember the combination he used last year.
What is retroactive interference?
It is the Gestalt principle that is seen here.
What is figure and ground?
During a noisy party, you hear someone mention your name across the room, even though you weren’t paying attention.
What is the cocktail party effect?
After hearing news of a plane crash, you believe air travel is more dangerous than statistics suggest.
What is availability heuristic?
This type of memory deals with personal experiences, such as your first day of school.
What is episodic memory?
A student remembers items at the start and end of their grocery list but forgets those in the middle.
What is the serial position effect?
Using this Gestalt Principle, you group chairs and tables in a cafeteria as separate sets based on their closeness to one another.
What is proximity?
Tendency to ignore environmental changes due to inattention.
What is change blindness?
After a coin lands on heads five times in a row, Jamie bets that the next flip must be tails because "it’s due for a change."
What is gambler's fallacy?
This occurs when you know the information but can't quite retrieve it.
What is the tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon?
Rapid forgetting over time levels off.
What is the forgetting curve?
While hiking, Mia notices that the grass nearby appears detailed and sharp, but the grass on the distant hills looks smooth and blurry. This depth cue helps her judge how far away the hills are.
What is texture gradient?
Strengthening synaptic connections for long-term memory.
What is long term potentiation?
When a person uses the same strategy repeatedly after failing to solve a puzzle because it worked on previous ones, they are relying on this.
What is a mental set?
Sometimes referred to as a memory palace, this strategy of memory enhancement involves associating items with familiar locations to remember them.
What is method of loci?
A witness’s memory of a crime changes after hearing misleading questions during an interview.
What is the misinformation effect?