Seeing Things
Things I Forgot
Brainiacs
Prefrontal Cortex
Right Hemisphere
100

These are ways that we can perceive depth without using two eyes (relative size is an example)

What is monocular cues?

100

The unconscious encoding of information into our memory

What is automatic processing?

100

Charles Spearman's g stands for this

What is general intelligence?

100

This is when we ignore evidence that challenges our preconceptions

What is confirmation bias?

100

This type of thinking leads to multiple possible solutions

What is divergent thinking?

200

This explains why you failed to see the gorilla because you were counting basketball passes

What is inattentional blindness?

200

This is encoding information in a meaningful way

What is semantic or deep processing?

200

This type of intelligence decreases as you age

What is fluid intelligence?

200

It's a step-by-step formula for solving a problem

What is algorithm?

200

It's what you see in your mind when you think of the doggiest dog

What is a prototype?

300

An open door might appear on our retinas as a trapezoid but this is why our brain still sees it as a rectangle

What is perceptual constancy (or shape constancy)?

300
This explains why we're most likely to remember the beginning and end of a list

What is serial position effect?

300

This is your ability to understand what another person is feeling

What is emotional intelligence?

300

It's a mental shortcut for solving a problem, often based on past experience

What is a heuristic?

300

They are mental groups of similar objects or ideas

What are concepts?

400

This term explains why you might call an egg white a "yolk" after hearing words like folk, broke, and croak.

What is perceptual set?

400

DAILY DOUBLE

This process strengthens connections between neurons and is the basis of learning and memory

What is long-term potentiation?

400

This measures whether a test gives consistent results when taken multiple times

What is reliability?

400

This explains why we might continue to believe something, despite seeing contrary evidence

What is belief perseverance?

400

This happens when a kid thinks a zebra is just a striped horse

What is assimilation?

500

This subfield of psychology explains how we group things that are similar, mentally close incomplete shapes, and associate things that appear similar

What is gestalt?

500

This is why you might be able to answer when a teacher sees you're distracted and asks "What did I just say?"

What is phonological loop?

500
It's considered the most reliable intelligence test, consisting of 15 varying subtests

What is the Weschler (WAIS) test?

500

This explains why we avoid swimming at the beach after watching a shark attack movie

What is availability heuristic?
500

This happens when a kid realizes that some mammals live in the ocean

What is accommodation?

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