Thinking, Problem-Solving Decision Making
Perception
Memory
Intelligence
100

The __________ bias/effect is the tendency to be overly influenced by the first piece of information we are given

anchoring

100

The "cocktail party" effect, inattentional blindness (the gorilla video), and change blindness are all examples of _______________.

selective attention

100

The theory developed by Elizabeth Loftus and others, that claims our memories are far less reliable and far more open to distortions and manipulations than we imagine, is called ________ ________ Theory.

Reconstructive Memory

100

Howard Gardner's Theory of ______________ claims we have at least 8 distinct ways of being smart (visual-spatial, logical mathematical, verbal linguistic, naturalistic, interpersonal, musical, intrapersonal, bodily-kinesthetic)

Multiple Intelligences

200

Selectively focusing on ("cherry picking") information that supports our existing opinions and beliefs, while ignoring information that does not, is called ____________.

confirmation bias

200

Taking sensory information and then assimilating it is called ____________ processing, while using expectations, models, and ideas to interpret sensory information is called __________ processing.

bottom-up

top-down

200

_______ _______ is the theory that claims memories of emotionally salient events are extremely clear and detailed but we can be overconfident about remembering specific details.

Flashbulb Memory

200

What is the difference between aptitude and achievement tests?

aptitude tests measure your capabilities and potential (ex: SAT, ACT, ASVAB)

achievement tests measure your knowledge and understanding of particular content / subjects (ex: AP exams, mid-term and final course exams, etc)

300

The "I knew it all along" phenomenon is called ____________.

hindsight bias

300

_________ _________ (binocular and monocular), ______________ (color, shape, size, brightness), and _________ (stroboscopic, phi phenomenon, and autokinetic effect) all influence perception.

depth cues

constancy

motion

300

The three processes of memory are _________ (the process of getting information into our memory system), _____________ (the process of retaining information over time), and __________________ (the process of getting information out of memory storage)

encoding

storage

retrieval

300

What are three tests of a good test?

1) ________________

2) _______________

3) ________________

1) Standardization (all questions, instructions, and procedures are the same for all test takers)


2) Validity (the test is accurate at measuring what it claims to measure).

3) Reliability (yields consistent results over time and across different populations)

400

Cognitive biases are also called ________ and can be useful as a "rule of thumb".

heuristics

400

Perception is influenced by _________ (perceptual set), __________ (external factors), _____________ (seeing what we want to see), and ____________ (our feelings).

expectations

context

motivation

emotion

400

Memory retrieval failures can occur when new information blocks/distorts previous information -  _________ interference and when old information prevents encoding of new information - _________ interference.  Amnesia can also prevent the formation of new memories - _______ amnesia or an inability to retrieve memories from the past _______ amnesia. Most of us have _______ amnesia or an inability to remember events from before the age of 3.

retroactive

proactive

anterograde

retrograde

infantile

400

What is the formula for the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test?  How are current IQ tests similar? Why do you think this specific formula is no longer used?

Mental Age

_________               X 100 = IQ

Chronological Age


While 100 still represents the mean IQ score, "mental age" is no longer part of the formula as the adult mental age of "20" was arbitrary.


500

The ______ _______ Model developed by Kahneman and Tversky describes two systems of thinking. 

System 1 is:

System 2 is:

Dual Processing

System 1: Fast, Intuitive, Unconscious, Biased. Optimistic, Automatic, Based on Feelings

System 2: Slow, Thoughtful, Deliberative, Based on Logic and Reasoning

500

Gestalt principles include ________ (closely grouped objects look connected), ________ (objects resembling each other appear to be connected), __________ (objects that look like they form a shape appear to be connected), __________ (objects that appear to be connected by other elements), and __________ (we fill in gaps with our mind)

proximity

similarity

continuity

connectedness

closure

500

_________ memory includes semantic memory (names, dates, facts) and episodic memory (life events / personal biography) and is governed by brain regions such as _______; whereas _________ memory includes conditioned associations and skills ("muscle memory") and is governed by brain regions such as __________.  Emotional memory is governed by the ________.

Explicit

Hippocampus / Prefrontal Cortex

Implicit

Basal Ganglia / Cerebellum

Amgydala

500

Carol Dweck's __________ Theory.  Posits two approaches _________ and __________.  Describe each briefly:

Mindset

Fixed Mindset:  abilities are innate, failure is final, dislikes challenges, jealous of others' abilities.

Growth Mindset: challenging yourself helps you grow, skills and abilities can be developed over time, failure is a learning opportunity.