Ch. 8
Ch. 8
Ch. 8
100

Inference

logical interpretations and conclusions not part of the original stimulus

100

Semantic memory

organized knowledge about the world, includes general knowledge, lexical or language knowledge, and conceptual knowledge

100

Schemas

general knowledge about a situation, event, or person

200

Prototype Approach

argues that we decide whether an item belongs to a category by comparing it to a prototype

200

Exemplar Approach

argues that we decide whether an item belongs to a category by comparing it to examples of that category

200

Semantic priming effect

We respond faster to an item if it follows an item with similar meaning

300

Anderson’s ACT-R Approach

Adaptive Control of Thought-Rational

300

Parallel Distributed Processing Approach

Networks of simple, neuron-like units process information simultaneously

300

Anderson’s ACT-R Approach

Meaning of sentences represented by series of propositionnetworks

400

Connection weights

 determine how much activation one unit can pass on to another unit

400

graceful degradation

The brain’s ability to provide partial memory

400

Boundary extension

tendency to remember having viewed a greater portion of a scene than you actually saw

500

Constructive model of memory

we integrate information from individual sentences to construct larger ideas, but later cannot untangle the constructed information from the verbatim sentences

500

Pragmatic view of memory

we pay attention to the portion of the message most relevant to our current goals

500

Gender stereotypes

 widely shared beliefs and opinions that we associate with females and males

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