Chapter 7.1
Chapter 7.2
Chapter 9.1
Chapter 9.2
Chapter 6
100

What was the works of Ivan Pavlov?

- father of classical conditioning 

- worked with dogs 

100

Punishment vs Reinforcement

  • Reinforcement encourages a behavior by rewarding it or removing something unpleasant.
  • Punishment discourages a behavior by introducing something unpleasant or taking something desirable away.
100

Difference between phonemes and morphemes

Phonemes are the smallest units of sound that are recognizable as speech. 

Morphemes are the smallest units of language that are made up of phonemes 

100

What is the exemplar theory 


category
judgements by comparing
new instances with
memories of other
instances of a category
• e.g., categorize a new dog
as a good example or
“exemplar” of the category
dog...
• strength over prototype
theory


100

three types of encoding 

semantic encoding, visual imagery encoding, and organizational encoding

200

Describe the acquisition phase 

In classical conditioning when you present the NS with a US 

200
Primary reinforcers vs Secondary reinforcers

• primary reinforcers: help
satisfy biological needs or
desires
• food, shelter, etc.
• secondary reinforcers: are
effective because of CC
associations with primary
reinforcers
• trophy, money, verbal
approval, etc.

200

What is the language development for children for a 12 month old and a 5 year old 

12 months = 10 words 

5 years = 10,000 words 

200

What is category-specific deficit?


category-specific deficit:
inability to recognize objects
that belong to a particular
category

200

what are the three types of judgement?

Case Judgement, Rhyme Judgement, semantic judgement

300

What is the Rescorla-Wagner model

- conditioned stimuli teach
animals to set up expectations
• pushing back against
behaviourism
• conditioning of Pavlov’s dogs
doesn’t lead to ONLY
salivation
(not a simple reflex)
• indication of cognitive
component to CC
26


300

rats in a latent learning group
were exposed to maze without
reward for 10 days and were rewarded for last 7 days,
showing dramatic
improvement. What could they have had to help them in this? 

Likely had a cognitive map:
mental representation of the
physical features of the
environment


300
What is the definition of over regularize? and what age does this usually occur in.

overregularize: overuse a rule
i.e., adding “-ed” for past tense

age 4-5

300

What parts of the brain are responsible for identifying humans, identifying animals, and retrieving tool names

left temporal lobe —>
identifying humans
• lower left temporal lobe —>
identifying animals
• occipital and parietal lobe
junction —> retrieving tool
names


300

Types of sensory memory 

Iconic memory and Echoic memory

400

Why might safe-injection sites help to reduce
drug-related deaths?

body’s counteracting balancing
responses feed into developing
tolerance
• so, new environments should
decrease tolerance..

400

Distributive practice vs massed practice 

Distributive practice is when you study activities that are spread out with time between repetitions. 

Massed practice is cramming material in one session

400

What are the language centres of the brain? and what condition is there that can cause difficulty

Brocas Area - Left frontal cortex responsible for language production

Wernickes Area - Left temporal cortex responsible for language comprehension

400

heuristics vs algorithms 

• heuristics: fast and efficient
strategies that may facilitate
decision making but do not
guarantee that a solution will be
reached
• algorithm: well-defined
sequence of procedures or rules
that guarantees a solution to a
problem


400

what is the episodic buffer and what controls it?

episodic buffer: integrates
visual and verbal information
from subsystems into a
combined code
• e.g, recognizing words: visual
and verbal info combined
• gateway to long-term memory
• central executive: coordinates
subsystems and episodic buffer
• controls flow of information
through system


500

Where does the conditioning of motor skills happen?

In the cerebellum 

500

What is delayed reinforcement? Give an example. 

Delayed reinforcement refers to a situation in which a reward or reinforcer is provided after a time delay following a desired behavior, rather than immediately. 

eg. The challenge of quitting vaping because of reward in good health is delayed. 

500

What are the syntactic rules? 

How words can be combined to form phrases and sentences. 

• e.g., every
sentence must
contain 1+ nouns
(with adjectives or
articles) and 1+
verbs (with
adverbs or
articles)


500

Describe the sunk cost fallacy and give an example. 

sunk cost fallacy: people make
decisions about a current
situation on the basis of what
they have previously invested in
the situation
• if paid $100 to see a concert
and on the day it is raining...
• spend $100 and stay at home
• spend $100 and be
uncomfortable in the rain


500
What are the two types of amnesia?

Retrograde amnesia- inability to retrieve information acquired before a certain date

Anterograde amnesia- inability to transfer new information from short-term store to long-term store

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