Problem Solving
Intelligence
Memory
Types of memory
Perception
100

The tendency that people have to only use solutions that have worked in the past

What is Mental Set?

100

The accumulation of knowledge & verbal skills that tends to increase with age

What is Crystallized Intelligence?

100

Being able to access information without being cued.

What is recall?

100

Any memories that are held just long enough to be perceived.

What is Sensory Memory?

100

an organized whole, which may exceed the sum of its parts

What is a gestalt?

200

a form of fixation where one can see an object as only useful for the purpose most commonly associated with it

What is Functional Fixedness?

200

The ability to perceive, control, and evaluate emotions.

What is Emotional Intelligence?

200

The process of putting information into the memory system.

What is encoding?
200

Sensory input to the visual system goes into this place.

What is Iconic Memory?

200

Failure to notice visible objects when our attention is directed elsewhere

What is inattentional blindness?

300

You look for information that will help your case & ignore opposing ideas.

What is Confirmation Bias?

300
Assessment that aims to predict a person's future performance/capacity to learn

What is an aptitude test?

300

memory techniques, especially those that use vivid imagery & organization devices

What are mnemonics?

300

facts and experiences we can consciously know and declare

What are explicit memories?

300

ability to see objects in 3D and judge their distance

What is depth perception?

400

the way an issue is presented, can affect decisions and judgments

What is framing?

400

Observation that worldwide intelligence predictably increases over time

What is the Flynn Effect?

400

coordinated by the central executive, this memory component briefly holds auditory info while you work with it

What is the phonological loop?

400

A newer understanding of short-term memory, this holds information we are currently aware of and thinking about

What is working memory?

400

depth signals that are available to each eye separately

What are monocular cues?

500

Estimating the likelihood of events based on easily accessible memory; presuming events are common because examples readily come to mind

What is the availability heuristic?

500

The extent to which a test yields consistent results

What is reliability?

500

Model of memory that compares our mind to a computer in a series of 3 stages.

What is the Information Processing Model?

500

Enhanced memory after practicing retrieval--more effective than simply re-reading info

What is the testing effect?

500

illusion of motion created when 2 or more lights blink in quick succession

What is the phi phenomenon?

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