Memory

Visual perception

Social psychology

Psychological studies
Ethical considerations
100

___refers to memories of personal events or experiences you may have had in your life that are personal to you.  

Episodic memory

100

A grey banana seen as yellow because that is what we've learned from a lifetime of experience. 

What is this psychological influence on visual perception?

Past experience

100

Less helping in emergencies when others are present.

The bystander effect

100

___ (1998) studied context-dependent memory.

Participants studied and tested in silent or noisy conditions.

Recall was better when study and test conditions matched. 

Grant et al. (1998)

100

Participants can leave a study at any time without penalty.

Withdrawal rights

200

___ is a learning process where behaviour is modified by its consequences, either through reinforcement or punishment. 

Operant Conditioning

200

___ are specialised cells in the eye's retina that are highly sensitive to low light, allowing you to see in dim conditions and at night. 

Rods
200
Power is given to a higher authority and may be due to role or position. 

eg. a police officer has authority.

Legitimate power

200

____ had surgery to remove his hippocampus for epilepsy.

This resulted in severe anterograde amnesia.

Henry Molaison (HM)

200

The principle that parapsychologists must protect a client's private information.  

Confidentiality

300
A type of long term, implicit memory that allows you to perform tasks automatically, without conscious thought. 

Procedural memory

300

What are the psychological influences on visual perception. 

- past experiences 

- context 

- motivation 

- emotion

300

A style of leadership where the leader negotiates decisions with the group/

Democratic Leadership

300

___ (2000) studied the hippocampus in London taxi drivers.

This found an increased hippocampus volume linked to spatial navigation. 

Maguire et al. (2000)

300

Researchers provide participants with information about the study after their involvement is complete. 

Debriefing 

400

Old memories interfere with new ones OR new memories interfere with old ones

Interference theory (proactive and retroactive)

400

Light energy hits the retina and is converted by rods and cones into electromagnetic nerve impulses. 

What stage of receiving/Interpreting visual stimuli is this? 

Transduction

400

__ is power from another's desire to relate to the person

Referent Power

400

___ (1968) studied a persons conformity using a smoke filled room that was ignored by confederates. 

Proved that social pressure can inhibit emergency intervention. 

Latane and Darley (1968)

400

Participants can enter research freely with full information about what it means for them to take part, and that they give consent before they enter the research. 

Informed consent


500

___ is a learning process where a neutral stimulus becomes a conditioned stimulus by being repeatedly paired with an unconditioned stimulus, causing a conditioned response.  

Classical conditioning

500

Receiving and Interpreting visual stimuli involves the following steps:

1. Reception

2. Transduction

3. Transmission

4. Selection

5. Organisation

6. Interpretation


500

a child begins to learn the attitudes and values of those closest to them. 

Primary social learning

500

____(1966) studied retrieval cues in memory.

Participants recalled more words with category cues than free recall.

Tulving and Pearlstone (1966)

500

What are all 7 ethical considerations

- confidentiality

- voluntary participation

- withdrawal rights

- informed consent

- deception in research 

- no cause of harm

- debriefing 

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