Memory!
More Memory
Chapter 8 OR 10 Mashup
Motivation
Emotion
100

A clear memory of an emotionally significant event is known as this.

What is a flashbulb memory?

100

The persistence of learning over time through the encoding, storage, and retrieval of information is known as this.

What is............


MEMORY!!!!!

100

You are really excelling at playing the ukelele your Great Aunt Edna bought you for your birthday. Feeling like it's time to move up to the next level, you search for bands that are looking for ukelele players. You find one such band, and remember the number just long enough to call it. What type of memory system are you using to hold that information before you store it or forget it?

Short term memory.

100

You are thirsty. You seek out water to satisfy that thirst. This theory explains that, with few exceptions, when a physiological need increases, so does our psychological drive to reduce it.

What is the Drive-Reduction Rheory.

100

These are a mix of bodily arousal, expressive behaviors, and conscious experiences.

What are emotions?

200

If you have difficulty forming new memories you have this form of amnesia; if you cannot recall old memories you have this form.

What is anterograde and retrograde?
200

Your teacher hands you a fill in the blank test, requiring you to call on information you previously learned. This is a example of what?

What is recall?

200

Organizing items into familiar, manageable units, such as how you break up your phone number or Social Security number.

What is chunking?

200

Psychologists define this as a need or desire that energizes and directs behavior.

What is motivation?

200

The theory that our experience of emotion is our awareness of our physiological responses to an emotion-arousing stimulus.

What is the James-Lange Theory?

300

******DAILYDOUBLE!!!!******

When misleading information has corrupted one's memory of an event, it is known as this.

What is the misinformation effect?

300

When you are asked to identify items you previously learned, such as on the next multiple choice exam, you are being asked to employ this measure of memory.

What is recognition?

300

Memory aids, especially those that use vivid imagery and organizational devices, are known as this. Remember that shaking, scared cow from the slides to help remember what "coward" meant.

What are mnemonics?

300

A complex behavior that is rigidly patterned throughout a species and is unlearned is known as this. 

What is an instinct?

300

The theory that an emotion-arousing stimulus simultaneously triggers physiological responses and the subjective experience of emotion.

What is the Cannon-Bard Theory?

400

Matilda has no memory of almost drowning at the beach when she was 8. Freud, or any psychoanalyst, might explain this as being an example of _________, when people banish from their consciousness anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings, and memories.

What is repression?

400

The limitless storage space in your brain that includes knowledge, skills, and experiences is known as this.

What is long-term memory?

400

One effective way to distribute practice is repeated self-testing, a phenomenon that Roediger and Karpicke refer to as the __________ __________. Testing does more than assess learning; it improves it.

What is the testing effect?

400

******DAILY DOUBLE!!!*****

This hierarchy of human needs posits that it is only after each need is met that we can go on to the next level of need. 

Name the guy, and the pyramid, and the first rung on the pyramid.

Who is Maslow, Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, and what are physiological needs?

400

What was the purpose of each of you filling out the Johari window exercise?

Lots of possible answers! Some include that it allows you to build a visual picture of your personality, develop greater self-awareness and team awareness of different people's characteristics, preferences, and abilities, as well as your strengths and weaknesses.

500

This area of the brain helps process explicit memories for storage.

What is the hippocampus?

500

This is the term we use to describe the processing of information into the memory system-for example, by extracting meaning.

What is encoding?

500

A few weeks ago we sat in a circle, taking turns answering random questions. Like most icebreaker type activities, this was designed to build relationships and feel part of a group, which appeals to ur need to belong, also known as this.

What is affiliation need?

500

Deliberate social exclusion of individuals or groups is known as this.

What is ostracism?

500

The name for the Schachter-Singer theory that to experience emotion one must be physically aroused and also cognitively label that arousal.

What is the two-factor theory?

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