It's theorized that children require language exposure during this time.
What is critical period?
This type of learning uses associations and repetitions.
What is classical conditioning?
Patient H.M. suffered from this type of amnesia.
What is anterograde?
This phenomena refers to when a difference in a person's visual field is not perceived.
What is change blindness?
This describes the set of neurons that encode a representation.
What is population code?
What area is related to language comprehension?
What is Wernicke's Area?
Use these nouns to create an example of negative punishment: child, candy, tantrum
What is To reduce tantrum behavior, Candy was taken away from the child?
What brain area is most commonly associated with memory?
What is the hippocampus?
These photoreceptors can detect color.
What are cones?
This ailment involves difficulty repeating just-heard words.
What is conduction(/ive) aphasia?
This ailment is a deficit in reading ability.
What is alexia?
This person put rats in mazes and discovered they latently learned the layout.
Who is Edward Tolman?
This type of memory deals with non-subjective factual information.
What is declarative?
This pathway process information such as shape, size and category.
What is the ventral visual pathway? ("Who/What")
In the eye-tracking study involving choosing between candy and candle, this measure was used to determine cognitive load or uncertainty.
What is curvature of eye-movement trajectory?
Give the formal names (in order) for these concepts:
a) Grammar
b) Meaning
c) Word
d) Smallest distinct unit of sound
What is syntax, semantics, lexeme, and phoneme?
This describes when a previously extinct/extinguished behavior reappears.
What is spontaneous recovery?
Iconic and echoic memory operate on this timescale/order of magnitude.
When cells are fatigued this illusion may be produced.
What is an aftereffect or afterimage?
In an energy landscape, this stable point is flirtatious.
What is an attractor basin.
The theory that individuals who use different languages think differently; An inextricable relationship between language and thought.
What is linguistic relativity? / What is the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis?
In an ANN, this process enables learning by sending feedback from the output and adjusting weights and connections in the reverse sequence.
What is back-propagation?
This describes a strengthening of synaptic connections through repetition.
What is long-term potentiation?
This component of Gibson's Ecological Theory does not require minds to do complex mental reconstruction.
What is Direct Perception?
The duck-rabbit image is a common example.
What are bistable figures?