Perception
Thinking
Intelligence
Memory 1
Memory 2
100

relative size, linear perspective, texture gradient, interposition are all examples of this 

What are monocular cues?

100

A cognitive bias that limits a person to using an object only in the way it is traditionally used.



What is functional fixedness?

100

the phenomenon where individuals underperform in situations where they feel at risk of confirming negative stereotypes about their social group.

What is a stereotype threat?

100

remembering to perform a planned action or recall a planned intention at some future point.

What is prospective memory?

100

type of implicit memory that involves the recall of how to perform tasks or skills automatically.

What is a procedural memory?

200

Our ability to focus on a single conversation in a noisy environment, like a crowded party, while tuning out other stimuli.

What is the cocktail party effect?

200

A thought process or method used to generate creative ideas by exploring many possible solutions.

What is divergent thinking?
200

the trend of average IQ scores increasing over generations. It suggests a rise in general intelligence due to environmental and cultural factors (we're getting smarter)

What is the Flynn effect?

200

This type of memory does not require conscious thought and is crucial for performing everyday tasks automatically.

What is implicit memory?

200

type of explicit memory that involves the recollection of personal experiences and specific events.

What is episodic memory?

300

mental frameworks that help us organize and interpret information in the world around us.

What are schemas?

300

Cognitive shortcut wherein individuals make judgments about the probability of an event under uncertainty based on how much it resembles existing stereotypes or typical cases.

What is a representative heuristic?

300

Consistency in test results over time and among different scorers. It assures that a test yields stable and dependable measurements.

What is reliability?

300

the tendency to remember items at the beginning (primacy effect) and end (recency effect) of a list better than those in the middle

what is the serial position effect?

300

Form of short-term memory used for temporarily holding and manipulating information. Short-term and long-term memories combine.

What is your working memory?

400

 A tendency to perceive or notice some aspects of the available sensory data and ignore others.  It's influenced by our expectations, experiences, and context, shaping our perception by predisposing us to see what we expect to see.

What is a perceptual set? 

400

Cognitive bias that occurs when individuals believe that the outcome of a random event is influenced by previous outcomes, even though each event is independent and has no bearing on future results.

Gambler's fallacy 

400

the belief that abilities and intelligence can be developed through dedication and effort.

What is growth mindset?

400

the phenomenon where memory retrieval is most effective when an individual is in the same state of consciousness as they were when the memory was formed.

What is state-dependent memory?

400

the inability to remember where, when, or how previously learned information has been acquired (lost context), while retaining the factual knowledge.

what is source amnesia?

500

We perceive whole objects or figures rather than just a collection of parts.

What is the gestalt psychology? 

500

The cognitive process of fitting new information into existing schemas.

What is assimilation?

500

Shows how well a test can forecast future outcomes or behaviors. It measures if test scores can predict future performance accurately.

what is predictive validity?

500

The awareness and understanding of one's own thought processes, especially in relation to learning and memory.

What is metacognition?

500

progressive neurological disorder that leads to memory loss, cognitive decline, and behavioral changes.

What is Alzheimers disease?

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