MEMORY
LIFESPAN DEVELOPMENT
LEARNING
DISORDERS
PERSONALITY
100

Likens human memory to computer operations;

1. Encoding

2. Storage

3. Retrieval

What is the Information Processing Model?

100

A pattern of thought or behavior that organizes categories of information, and the relationships among them.

What is a schema?

100

Any event or situation that evokes a response

What is a stimulus?

100

Sense of powerlessness that one may experience, after a series of perceived failures. May lead to hopelessness and passive resignation; "Giving up" because they believe that they have no control over the outcome.

What is Learned Helplessness?

100

Information processing of which we are unaware

What is unconscious?

200

Unconscious encoding of incidental information (example: space and time)

What is automatic processing?

200

The awareness that things continue to exist, even when not perceived(seen/heard.etc)

What is object permanence?

200

The process of acquiring through experience, new and relatively enduring information or behaviors

What is learning?

200

A disorder in which a person alternates between the hopelessness and lethargy of depression and the overly excited state of mania.

What is Biploar Disorder?

200

Freud's concept of the "Executive" part of personality. Mediator between the desire to satisfy basic drives (immediate gratification), and the restraining demands of the "reasoning" part of the personality(which considers the long-term consequences). This componant of personality is also described as being the "conscience"

What is the ego?

300

Memory aids, especially those techniques that use vivid imagery and organizational devices

What are mnemonics?

300

Interpreting our new experiences in terms of our existing schemas

What is assimilation?

300

Type of learning in which one learns to link two or more stimuli, thus anticipating events.

What is classical conditioning?

300

A prolonged state of hopeless depression; Must last two or more weeks and present with five or more specific symptoms, ranging from depressed mood to lethargy, often including sleep changes, changes in appetite and difficulty with memory/concentration.

What is Major Depressive Disorder?

300

Readiness to perceive one's self favorably. Example: If I dod well on an exam, it is because I am smart. If I do poorly on an exam, it is because it was a poorly written test.

What is self-serving bias?

400

Enhanced memory after retrieving, rather than simply rereading information

What is the Testing Effect?

400

Adapting our current understanding(schemas) to incorporate new information

What is accommodation?

400

Increases/ strengthens behaviors by stopping/reducing a negative stimulus(ex. seat belt signal-beeps until you buckle up)

What is Negative Reinforcement?

400

Compulsive "fretting". Overthinking about our problems and their causes.

What is Rumination?

400

Excessive self-love and self- absorption

What is narcissism?

500

Explicit(conscious) memory of facts and general knowledge

What is semantic memory?
500

Maturation of this part of the brain, lags behind the development of the emotional limbic system. This, combined with a surge of hormones, helps to explain their sometimes impulsive and risky behavior

What are the frontal lobes?

500

A type of learning in which behavior is strengthened if followed by a reinforcer, or diminished/eliminated if followed by a punisher.

What is operant learning?

500

A psychological disorder characterized by delusions, hallucinations, disorganized speech, and/or inappropriate emotional expression

What is Schizophrenia?

500

Giving priority to the goals of one's own goals over group goals and defining one's identity in terms of personal attributes rather than group identifications

What is individualism?

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