2.1
2.2+2.3
2.4+2.5
2.6+2.7
2.8
100

A collection of basic knowledge about a concept or entity that serves as a guide to perception, interpretation, imagination, or problem solving.

What is a schema?

100

The most ideal image of a concept.

What is a prototype?

100

Organizing information into manegable unites.

What is chunking?

100

What is the difference of recognition and recall?

Recall- retrieving information without cues

Recognition- identifying correct information with cues

100

How you measure intelligence by multiple abilitites.

What is the g factor?

200

Abiliy to focus one's listening attention on a single talker among a mixture of conversations and background noises.

What is the Cocktail Party effect?

200

Step- by- step process for solving a problem.

What is an algorithm?

200

The idea that people are more likely to remember the first and last items in a list and are less likely to remember the middle.

What is the serial position effect?

200

When you have better recall when you're in the same environment as you first learned the information.

What is Context- dependent memory?

200

Consistent procedures and environments for testing.

What is standardization?

300

Retinal disparity and convesions are examples of ___.

What is binocular cues?

300

Name the stages of the memory processing.

encoding-> storage -> retrieval

300

When you use visualizations of familiar places to help recall information.

What is the Method of Loci?

300

Graph that shows that time is a significant factor in forgetting.

What is the forgetting curve?

300

Fixed mindset vs. Growth mindset

Fixed mindset- you think your inteligence is fixes

growth mindset- inteligence is developed through effort

400

Failure to notice the existence of an unexpected item.

What is inattentional blindness?

400

What is the difference between echoic and iconic?

echoic- auditory memories

iconic- visual memories

400

What is the difference between Maintenance rehersal and elaborative rehersal?

Maintenance rehersal- when you repeat information over and over again- short term

Elaborative rehersal- linking new information to meaning or prior knowledge

400

Pro- active vs. Retroactive

proactive- old information disrupt recall of new information

retroactive- new information disrupts recall of old information

400

The idea that IQ scores are constantly rising.

What is the Flyyn effect?

500

What is the difference between Bottom- Up and Top- Down Processing?

Top- Down: Information processing guided by higher- level mental processes, as when we construct perceptions drawing on our experience and expectations.

Bottom- Up: Analysis that begins with sensory receptors and works up to the brain's inegration of sensory information.

500

What is the difference between implicit and explicit memories?

implicit- retention of learned skills or classicly conditioned associations

explicit- your facts & experiences that you consciously aware of

500

What is the difference between retrograde and enterograde amnesia?

retrograde amnesia- when you can't remember anything from the past

anterograde amnesia- cannot form new memories

500

When you recall misleading information and your memories aren't an exact replica of the event that occured.

What is the misinformation effect?

500

What is stereotype threat vs. stereotype lift?

stereotype threat- when someone is at risk of confirming a sterotype of their group

stereotype lift- A non- stereotyped group is aware of a group's stereotype and they test better than the stereotype.

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