Perception
Thinking & Problem Solving
Memory Basics
Memory Processes
Intelligence
100

This is the term for when changes to the environment are not perceived due to inattention.

What is change blindness?

100

This is the ideal example of any given concept.

What is a prototype?

100

This type of memory refers to our recollection of personal events or general/factual knowledge.

What is explicit memory?
100

This is the term for repeating information over time to maintain it in memory.

What is maintenance rehearsal?

100

This is the term for the fact that intelligence scores have generally increased over time.

What is the Flynn Effect?

200

Name one of the Gestalt principles that help explain how humans organize their perceptual world.

What is closure/proximity/similarity/figure and ground?

200

This is a mental shortcut people use to make quick judgments.

What is a heuristic?
200

This is the biological process for memory where synaptic connections between neurons become stronger over time. 

What is long-term potentiation?

200

This effect predicts that information at the beginning and end of a list will be better remembered.

What is the serial-position effect?

200

This type of mindset believes intelligence can change with experience.

What is a growth mindset?

300

This is the term for when people attend to mentions of their name in loud environments.

What is the cocktail party effect?

300

This cognitive error occurs when people continue investing in something because of past investments.

What is the sunk-cost fallacy?

300

These are the three systems in the multi-store model of memory.

What are sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory?

300

This memory phenomenon occurs when retrieval is enhanced by being in the same mood as encoding.

What is state-dependent/mood-congruent memory?

300

This score is determined by dividing mental age by chronological age.

What is IQ (Intelligence Quotient)?

400

These monocular depth cues that give illusion of depth on flat surfaces.

What are relative clarity, relative size, texture gradient, linear perspective, and interposition?

400

This cognitive process allows for generating novel ideas and divergent thinking.

What is creativity?

400

These are the components of working memory that interact with the central executive.

What are the phonological loop and the visuospatial sketchpad?

400

This effect shows that distributing practice over time is better than massing it all at once.

What is the spacing effect?

400

These are the two main types of validity in psychological testing.

What are construct validity and predictive validity?

500

Explain the difference between bottom-up and top-down processing.

Bottom up starts with sensory info. Top-down starts with prior experience and expectation.

500

How do schemas change through assimilation and accommodation?

Taking in new info and incorporating it into an existing schema is assimilation. Changing schema to incorporate new info is accommodation.

500

What are the three levels of processing from shallowest to deepest?

structural, phonemic, and semantic

500

What are two types of interference that can cause forgetting?

Proactive and retroactive interference.

500

How has IQ testing historically impacted society in problematic ways?

Limiting access to jobs, military ranks, education, and immigration

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