Questions and Concepts
Questions and Concepts
Questions and Concepts
100

For each of the following areas of the brain, list what part of memory it is involved in: prefrontal cortex, temporal lobe, amygdala, cerebellum, and the hippocampus

prefrontal cortex: working memory

temporal lobe: explicit

amygdala: implicit (learning)

cerebellum: implicit (procedural)

hippocampus: consolidation and spatial memory

100

Positive punishment vs. positive reinforcement

Positive punishment: Add an unpleasant stimulus to decrease behavior

Positive reinforcement: Add pleasent stimulus to increase/maintain a behavior

100

Explain schemas and their purpose in long-term memory

Mental frameworks that organize, interpret, and simplify info based on past experiences

200

What is the difference between implicit and explicit memory?

Implicit: A system for long-term storage of unconscious memories that cannot be verbally described

Explicit: A system for long-term storage of unconscious memories that can be verbally described

200

Negative punishment vs. negative reinforcement

Negative punishment: Remove a pleasant stimulus to decrease behavior

Negative reinforcement: Remove unpleasant stimulus to increase/maintain behavior

200

What are networks of associations?

Mental maps in our brains where concepts, ideas, or memories are linked together like a web

300

How do selective and limited attention differ, and how do each impact our memory?

Selective: The ability to pay attention to relevant info while ignoring irrelevant info

Limited: The brain can only process a small amount of info simultaneously

300

Briefly describe Pavlovs experiment

By repeatedly ringing a bell (nuetral stimulus) just before feeding (unconditioned stimulus), the dogs learned to associate the sound with food, eventually salivating to the bell alone.

300

What are some ways people can help their prospective memory?

Use alarms, digital calendars, and place items in high visibility spots

400

Maintenence vs elaborative rehearsal

Maintenance: Using the working memory process to repeat info based on how it sounds (short-term)

Elaborative: Using working memory processes to think about how new info relates to yourself or prior knowledge (long-term)

400

Schedules of reinforcement and which works best

Continuous: Behavior that is reinforced every time the said behavior occurs

Partial: When positive reinforcement only occurs intermittently

Partial is better because it leads to us being more consistent, because you cannot predict when you'll be reinforced

400

What sorts of things impact memory loss?

Chronic stress, poor sleep, nutritional deficiencies, age, substance misuse, concussion, etc.

500

Types of long-term memory: semantic, episodic, declarative, procedural

Semantic: A person's knowledge about the world

Episodic: A person's personal experiences in chronological order

Declarative: Stored knowledge that can be called forth consciously as needed

Procedural: Permanent storage of learned skills

500

Understand the differences between the following: unconditioned stimulus, unconditioned response, conditioned stimulus, conditioned response

Unconditioned stimulus: Something that naturally triggers a response without any prior learning

Unconditioned response: An event that brings out a predictable response without training

Conditioned stimulus: A previously neutral stimulus that, after repeatedly being paired with an unconditioned stimulus, begins to trigger the same response

Conditioned response: A learned response to a stimulus

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