Memory
Conditioning
Learning
Cognition
Misc.
100

What is 'Memory'?

Retaining, retrieving, and using information about stimuli, images, events, ideas, and skills after the original information is no longer present.

100

What is 'Classical Conditioning'?

A learning process that occurs when two stimuli are repeatedly paired.

100

What is 'Shaping'?

The process of training a learned behavior that would not normally occur. It is defined as a method of increasing behavior through reinforcement in a process of successive approximation.

100

What is a 'Schema'?

A mental structure to help us understand how things work.

100

What is 'Generalization'?

The tendency to respond in the same way to different by similar stimuli.

200

What is 'Clustering'?

The tendency for items to be consistently grouped together in the course of recall.

200

What is 'Operant Conditioning'?

Method of learning that uses regards and punishment to modify behavior.

200

What are 'Schedules'?

The rules that determine how often an organism is reinforced for a particular behavior.

200

What is 'Chunking'?

The brain divides significant details into more minor units making them easier to retain in short-term memory.

200

What is 'Ethology' the study of?

Animals

300

What is 'Storage'?

The state of an item that is retained in memory after encoding and before retrieval.

300

What is 'Reinforcement'?

Used to describe the strengthening of a situation or element; fundamental aspect of operant conditioning.

300
The bobo doll experiment is an example of what?

Bandura's Social Learning

300

What is a 'Script'?

A set of behaviors and instructions that a person uses to remember how to navigate a situation.

300

What is the difference between 'Fluid Intelligence' and 'Crystalized Intelligence'?

Fluid is reasoning ability and the ability to generate, transform, and manipulate different types of novel information in real time; Crystalized is reflected in a person's general knowledge, vocabulary, and reasoning based on acquired information.

400

What is 'Encoding'?

The conversation of a sensory input into a form capable of being processes and deposited in memory.

400

What is 'Punishment'?

Refers to any change that occurs after a behavior that reduces the likelihood that this behavior will happen again.

400

What is 'Spontaneous Recovery'?

The sudden appearance of a previously extinct conditioned response after the unconditioned stimulus has been removed for some time.

400

What is 'Method of Loci'?

Uses visualizations of familiar spatial environments in order to enhance the recall of information.

400

What are the three key abilities for 'Triarchic Theory of Intelligence'?

Analytical, creative, practical. Theory of intelligence in which three key abilities are viewed as largely, although not entirely, distinct.

500

What is 'Recency Effect'?

The most recently presented facts, impressions, or items are learned or remembered better than material presented earlier.

500
What is 'Extinction'?

The gradual weakening of a conditioned response that results in the behavior decreasing or disappearing.

500

What are 'Token Economies'?

A behavioral modification system in which people earn tokens for displaying desired behaviors and later exchange these tokens for rewards and privilege's.

500

What is 'Metacognition'?

The knowledge and regulation of one's own cognition processes, which has been regarded as a critical component of creative thinking.

500

What is the difference between 'Elaborative Rehearsal' and 'Maintenance Rehearsal'?

Elaborative involves thinking about the meaning of an item to be remembered and Maintenance involves repetition without any consideration of meaning or making connections to other information.

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