Eye See You
False Memories
Amnesia, or not??
Learning
Long Term Memory
100

The brain's interpretation of raw sensory inputs.

What is "perception"?

100

A false, but subjectively compelling memory.

What is "memory illusion"?

100

The inability of adults to retrieve accurate memories before an early age.

What is "infantile amnesia"?

100

The act of studying large increments over a brief amount of time.

What is "massed practice"?

100

Reactivation or reconstruction of experiences from our memory stores.

What is "retrieval"?

200

The process of converting an external energy or substance into electrical activity within neurons.

What is "transduction"?

200

The creation of fictitious memories by providing misleading information about an event after it takes place.

What is the "misinformation effect"?

200

An emotional memory that is extraordinarily vivid and detailed.

What is a "flashbulb memory"?

200

The act of studying information in small increments over time.

What is "distributed practice"?

200

Generating previously remembered information.

What is "recall"?

300

A specialized cell responsible for converting external stimuli into neural activity for a specific sensory system.

What is a "sensory receptor"?

300

Imagining an event inflates confidence in the likelihood that it occurred.

What is "imagination inflation"?

300

The inability to encode new memories from our experiences.

What is "Anterograde Amnesia"?

300

The process of getting information into our memory banks.

What is "encoding"?

300

Reaquiring knowledge that we'd previously learned, but largely forgotten over time.

What is "relearning"?

400

A condition in which people experience cross-model sensations.

What is "synesthesia"?

400

Someone thinks they had a memory that actually happened to someone else.

What is "cryptomnesia"?

400

The loss of memories from our past.

What is "retrograde amnesia"?

400

The gradual strengthening of the connections among neurons from repetitive stimulation.

What is "Long-Term Potentiation"?

400

Selecting previously remembered information from an array of options.

What is "recognition"?

500

The smallest change in the intensity of a stimulus that we can detect.

What is "JND (Just Noticeable Difference)"?
500

Procedures that encourage patients to recall memories that may or may not have taken place.

What is "suggestive memory techniques"?

500

Part of the brain that can cause anterograde amnesia if damaged.

What is the "hippocampus"?

500

The phenomenon of remembering something better when the conditions under which we retrieve information are similar to the conditions under which we encoded it.

What is "Encoding Specificity"?

500

A hint that makes it easier for us to recall information.

What is a "retrieval cue"?

M
e
n
u