Mental Imagery
Mental Rotation
Cognitive Maps
Heuristics
Imagery Debate
100

What is mental imagery?

This is the mental representation of stimuli that are not physically present.

100

What is the mental rotation study?

This experiment by Shepard and Metzler studied how people mentally rotate objects.

100

What is a cognitive map?

This term describes a mental representation of spatial environments.

100

What is a heuristic?

This is a mental shortcut used to simplify decision making.

100

What is the analog approach?

This approach suggests mental images resemble actual visual perception.

200

What is auditory imagery?

This type of imagery involves imagining sounds, music, or voices.

200

What is the angle of rotation?

In mental rotation tasks, reaction time increases as this increases.

200

What is navigate?

Cognitive maps help people do this in their environment.

200

What is the rotation heuristic?

This heuristic causes people to remember tilted objects as more vertical or horizontal.

200

What is the propositional approach?

This approach argues that mental images are stored as abstract descriptions.

300

What is visual imagery?

This type of imagery involves picturing objects or scenes in your mind.

300

What is less time?

Small rotations usually take this amount of time compared to large rotations.

300

What is spatial information?

This type of information in cognitive maps includes locations and distances between places.

300

What is the alignment heuristic?

This heuristic causes people to think landmarks are more aligned than they actually are.

300

What is analog coding?

This approach suggests images function similarly to pictures in the mind.

400

What is long-term memory?

Mental imagery relies heavily on information stored in this type of memory.

400

What is mental rotation?

This cognitive ability allows people to rotate objects in their minds.

400

What are locations?

Cognitive maps help people remember routes between these types of places.

400

What is border bias?

This bias occurs when people think distances across borders are larger than they really are.

400

What is propositional coding?

This approach compares mental images to language-like representations.

500

What is imagery?

This cognitive process allows people to imagine objects even when they are not physically visible.

500

What is a mental rotation task?

This type of task often involves comparing two shapes to determine if they are the same or different.

500

What is distance estimation?

This skill allows people to estimate how far places are from each other

500

What is quickly?

Heuristics are useful because they help people make decisions more this.

500

What is the mind?

This debate focuses on how mental images are represented in this.

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