Perception
Decision-Making
Intro to
Memory
Intelligence
Intelligence Testing
100

The type of processing where perception is driven by external stimuli.

What is bottom-up processing?

100

A decision-making shortcut that involves judging the likelihood of things based on how well they represent particular prototypes.

What is the representativeness heuristic?

100

The type of memory involved when remembering how to perform tasks like riding a bike.

What is procedural memory?

100

The tendency for IQ scores to rise over time across generations is known by this name.

What is the Flynn effect?

100

The condition of having a significantly below-average IQ score, typically below 70.

What is intellectual disability?

200

This term describes how expectations or prior knowledge influence perception

What is top-down processing?

200

This fallacy occurs when people believe that future probabilities are altered by past events.

What is the gambler's fallacy?

200

The phenomenon where information is better recalled when an individual is in the same state as when the memory was formed.

What is state-dependent memory?

200

The concept that intelligence is comprised of multiple independent abilities, such as in Gardner's theory.

What is multiple intelligences?

200

The type of test designed to predict future performance.

What is an aptitude test?

300

This type of attention phenomenon occurs when individuals fail to notice changes in their environment.

What is change blindness? 

300

This concept describes the way information is presented and how it can influence decisions.

What is framing?

300

The process of repeatedly retrieving information to strengthen memory.

What is the testing effect? 
300

The type of intelligence that refers to accumulated knowledge and verbal skills.

What is crystallized intelligence?

300

This term refers to the consistency of a test in measuring what it aims to measure.

What is reliability? 

400

The name of the depth cue where two parallel lines seem to converge in the distance.

What is linear perspective?

400

A logical step-by-step procedure that guarantees a solution to a problem.

What is an algorithm?

400

This phenomenon causes memories to fade rapidly after learning but stabilizes over time.

What is the forgetting curve? 

400

A form of intelligence that involves novel thinking and the ability to adapt to new situations.

What is fluid intelligence?

400

The type of test designed to predict future performance.

What is aptitude?

500

This perceptual principle allows us to recognize objects as the same despite changes in size, shape, or brightness.

What is perceptual constancy?

500

This type of thinking involves generating multiple solutions to a problem.

What is divergent thinking? 

500

The mental process of retrieving stored memories.

What is recall?

500

This condition occurs when a person has a limited mental ability but excels in a specific area.

What is savant syndrome?

500

This index is derived by dividing mental age by chronological age and multiplying by 100.

What is the intelligence quotient?

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