It takes a shorter amount of time to do this thing after repetitive rehearsal everyday?
What is relearning?
Method of memory to remember things by imagining yourself in a familiar space.
What is the method of loci?
A quick lasting image in the brain.
What is iconic memory? Bonus 50: the quick remembering of auditory signals?
Not giving enough attention to something resulting in not keeping it in the brain.
What is encoding failure?
What does an aptitude test measure?
Predict future performance.
Ability to remember things in the future
What is prospective memory?
Learning something in your desk for AP Psych and when you return to that area you remember what you learned while there. this is an example of?
What is context dependent memory?
Also known as the inner voice?
What is the articulatory process? Bonus 100: apart of what system in the central executive model?
Forgetting where you received information?
What is source amnesia? Bonus 100: the tendency for adults to forget what happened during their early childhood.
The Idea that our scores on standardized tests have on average risen.
What is the flynn effect?
remembering the first and last thing sin a list.
What is the serial positioning effect? Bonus 100: name the two effect (first and last).
The in ability to form new memories
What is anterograde amnesia?
comparing the two images from the eyes to tell depth.
What is retinal disparity?
When you have gaps in your tory and fill them with fake information. the story is then repeated with the new information until you believe the events.
What is imagination inflation? Bonus 100: what is the process of taking information out of long term storage just to recite or edit it and then send it back to long term storage.
Intelligence quotient equation.
mental age/chronological age times 100
the context in which you are in is going to change how you perceive information.
What is context effect? Bonus 100: when subconscious messages change how you perceive something later.
Taking something into the schema and keeping the same schema.
What is assimilation? Bonus 50: what takes something into the schema and changes the schema?
Lines in the distance tend to merge.
What is linear perspective? Bonus 100: perceiving two similar things as one.
the belief that previous chances affect sequential chances.
What is Gambler's fallacy?
compare data from experiments to make a psychological connection.
What is psychometrics?
Judge how something fits the description of a prototype?
What is representative heuristics. Bonus 100: when you judge likelihood from how easily it appears in your mind.
A memory of very vivid emotional events
What is a flashbulb memory?
The period at a young age where stimulation to senses is necessary.
What is the critical period?
the idea to plan ahead for income or time.
What is planning fallacy?
Sternberg's 3 intelligences.
What is analytical, practical, and creative?