IQ Notions
Assessing IQ
Where's my librarian?
Give me a clue
I Forgot
Crystal Clear
Perception
100

Charles Spearman contended that this underlies all mental abilities and is therefore measured by every task on an intelligence test

what is general intelligence (a single "g" score)

100

A statistical procedure that identifies clusters of related items on a test

what is factor analysis

100

The process of getting information into our memory system

what is encoding

100

The activation, often unconsciously, of particular associations in memory

What is priming

100

I hit my head and can no longer form new memories

What is anterograde amnesia

100

Older adults likely have more of this intelligence than younger people 

what is crystallized intelligence

100

Cues that allow us to judge distance, which we only need one eye for.

monocular cues

200

A condition in which a person otherwise limited in mental ability has an exceptional special skill

what is savant syndrome

200

The AP exam is an example of this type of test

what is an achievement test

200

The process of retaining, encoded information

what is storage

200

The principle that our context-dependent memories are affected by detailed cues

what is the encoding specificity principle (2.6, p.233)

200

I am sorry, I bumped my head and can no longer recall any of the material from our class

what is retrograde amnesia

200

A self-confirming concern that one will be evaluated based on a negative stereotype

what is stereotype threat

200

We know a figure is closer if we can see it fully. A figure is farther away if it is partially covered. This is known as this aspect of perceptual organization.

What is Interposition

300

Disadvantage of Binet's concept of mental age in assessing intelligence

What is it is inappropriate for adults

300

The SAT was originally labeled as this type of test

What is an aptitude test

300

I will use this to recall my fave moments in AP Psych-- (the other type of explicit, conscious memory is semantic)

what is episodic memory

300

The tendency to recall experiences that are consistent with one's current or bad mood

What is mood-congruent memory

300

The famous graph that demonstrates that forgetting is initially rapid but then levels off with time

What is the Ebbinghaus' forgetting curve

300

A generational rise in average IQ scores

What is the Flynn Effect?

300

The perceived further distance of something which is higher in your visual field.

 relative height

400

naturalist, linguistic, logical (mathematical), musical, spatial, kinesthetic, intrapersonal, interpersonal,

What are Howard Gardner's eight intelligences (think "garden of intelligences)

400

Alfred Binet calculated intelligence by comparing this to chronological age

what is mental age

400

A new concept of short-term memory that includes active processing of incoming information and of information retrieved from long-term memory

what is working memory

400

The tendency to recall best the last (recency effect) and the first (primacy effect) items in a list

What is the serial position effect

400

I am sorry, I just have learned so much that I can't recall any new information

what is proactive interference

400

You all have more of this type of intelligence than Mr Beast (not much more tho)

What is fluid intelligence

400

The apparent meeting of two parallel lines in the distance.

 linear perspective

500

Analytical, creative and practical intelligences

What is Sternberg's triarchic theory of intelligence

500

The Stanford-Binet calculation for intelligence quotient (IQ)

What is Mental age/chronological age x 100

500

Taking a picture of our class at this very moment would utilize this

What is iconic memory

500

"I will never forget the day I was overwhelmed with emotion at scoring a 5 on the AP Psychology exam" is an example of this memory

What is a flashbulb memory

500

Wow, our most recent unit was so fascinating that I cannot recall anything from the previous units

what is retroactive interference

500

The proportion of variation among individuals in a group that we can attribute to genes

what is heritability

500

going 'nose blind' to a scent is an example of this 

sensory adaptation 

600

Having a keen sense of both social awareness and self-awareness

what is emotional intelligence

600

The tendency for distributed practice to yield better results than massed practice, or cramming

what is the spacing effect

600

When misleading information distorts one's memory of an event (remember Loftus and leading questions when asked questions about an accident)

what is the misinformation effect

600

Currently, the most widely used individual intelligence test

what is the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS)

600

__________ THEORY EXPLAINS HOW WE HEAR HIGH-PITCHED SOUNDS, WHILE ___________ THEORY EXPLAINS HOW WE HEAR LOW-PITCHED SOUNDS.

What is PLACE; FREQUENCY