Memory
Storage & Retrieval
Forgetting & Memory Construction
Thinking
Language
100
Learning that has persisted over time; information that has been acquired, stored, and can be retrieved.
What is memory?
100
A clear memory of an emotionally significant moment or event.
What is a flashbulb memory?
100

This disability will not let you form new memories after you have had an accident or some trauma.    

What is anterograde amnesia?

100

I am doing to this to prompt my thinking so I can activate things I have in memory.    Think drawing water from a well 

What is a priming?  

100
Smallest distinctive sound units in a language.
What are phonemes?
200
When our dual-track brain processes many things simultaneously.
What is parallel processing?
200

Retrival failure and I just can't find the words.   Where are they? 

What is the tip of the tongue phenomenon? 

200
When prior learning disrupts your recall of new information.
What is proactive interference?
200
Narrows the available solutions to determine the best solution.
What is convergent thinking?
200

This is the smallest unit of speech that carries meaning.   Think Prefixes 

What is a Morphene?

300
A certain kind of study effect that results in long-term memory retention.
What is the spacing effect?
300
The brain's equivalent of a "save" button for explicit memories.
What is the hippocampus?
300
After learning lists of nonsense syllables, this scientist developed a curve that discussed retention.
What is Ebbinghaus?
300

This is a sudden realization that will help you learn.   Think aha moment.

What is an insight? 

300
System of rules that enables us to communicate with one another.
What is grammar?
400

These are memory aids for thinking.   Vivid images and organizational devices to help you remember things that may first be complex 

mnemonics 

400

The more you strengthen the synapses in the brain the more likely this is to occur.     I have lots of potential if I keep firing my brain waves, right. 

What is long-term potentiation?

400

I recall experiences based on what I was feeling that day.    Even I was was in a bad one or good one it might jar my thoughts.  

What is mood congruent memory? 

400

How well do I match the prototype you have in your head?   Does the elderly woman knit baby blankets?    Does the teacher own a lot of books.  I am this term 

What is a representative heuristic? 

400

This is the set of rules by which language is governed and the set of meaning that words have.   

What is semantics.   

500

Chunking, mnemonics and hierarchies are all part of this  __________ ___________   It requires lots of attention 

What is effortful processing

500

This are important in memory retention.   esr  

Encoding, Storage, Retrieval    
500
When Piaget attributed a memory to his own experiences instead of his nursemaid's stories, he experienced an example of this.
What is source amnesia?
500

I only seek out information that I know I am going to agree with.  It makes life easier.   

What is confirmation bias? 

500

Identify the four stages of language development in babies.

What are babbling stage, one-word stage, two-word stage, and telegraphic speech?

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