Cognitive Development
Heuristics and Biases
Intelligence and Testing
Mindset and Motivation
Problem-solving
100

This term refers to mental frameworks that organize and interpret information.

What are schemas?

100

This heuristic involves judging the likelihood of an event based on how similar it is to a prototype.

What is the representativeness heuristic?

100

This is the overall ability to reason, solve problems, and learn, often referred to as

What is g (general intelligence)?

100

This mindset focuses on the belief that abilities are fixed and unchangeable.

What is a fixed mindset?

100

This type of thinking involves generating multiple possible solutions to a problem, often with no single correct answer.

What is divergent thinking?

200

 The process of integrating new information into existing schemas is called this

What is assimilation?

200

This heuristic involves estimating the probability of an event based on how easily examples come to mind.

What is the availability heuristic?

200

This number represents an individual's cognitive ability in comparison to the average.

What is IQ (Intelligence Quotient)?

200

This mindset emphasizes the belief that abilities can be developed and improved over time.

What is a growth mindset?

200

This type of thinking involves solving problems with a single, correct solution.

What is convergent thinking?

300

This term describes adjusting one's current schema to incorporate new information that doesn't fit.

What is accommodation?

300

This fallacy occurs when someone continues an endeavor due to previously invested resources, even when it's no longer beneficial.

What is the sunk-cost fallacy?

300

The concept that reflects the age at which a person performs mentally compared to the average person of a certain age.

What is mental age?

300

This concept refers to the risk of reinforcing negative stereotypes when individuals are reminded of them before a test.

What is stereotype threat

300

This term describes adjusting one's thinking or problem-solving approach when initial strategies fail.

What is cognitive flexibility?

400

A methodical, step-by-step procedure for solving problems is called this.

 What are algorithms?

400

This fallacy involves believing that past random events influence future ones in games of chance.

What is the gambler’s fallacy?

400

This is the actual age of a person in years, as opposed to their mental age.

What is chronological age?

400

This concept involves the phenomenon where reminding someone of positive stereotypes can enhance their performance.

What is stereotype lift?

400

This cognitive bias refers to the inability to see objects or solutions beyond their traditional use.

What is functional fixedness?

500

This cognitive bias involves the way information is presented affecting decisions and judgments.

What is framing?

500

This term refers to the tendency to persist with an approach that has worked in the past, even if it's no longer effective.

What is mental set?

500

This type of reliability involves comparing results from the same test taken at different times.

What is test-retest reliability?

500

This term describes the observation that average IQ scores have been increasing over time across generations.

What is the Flynn Effect?

500

This type of thinking is associated with being able to think outside the box and generate ideas.

What is creativity?

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