Cognitive Processing Memory Models
Cognitive Processing Thinking & Decisions
Cognitive Biases
Reliability of Cognitive Processing
Research
Technology and Cognition
100

This model suggests that sensory information from the world enters sensory memory and stays there for a few seconds and only a very small amount of the information will continue into the short-term memory (STM) store.

What is the Multi-Store Model of Memory?

100

We call our brains this in that they seek to minimize the amount of effort to think.

What are Cognitive Misers?

100

A systematic error in thinking that occurs when we are processing and interpreting information in the world around us that affects the decisions we make.

What is a cognitive bias?

100

A theory of memory recall, in which the act of remembering is influenced by other cognitive processes including perception, past experience, imagination, and beliefs.

What is Reconstructive Memory?

100

Which research method was used by Scoville and Milner to study patient H.M.?

What is a Case Study?

100

Social media can cater to this form of bias because algorithms use your data to feed you similar information.

What is confirmation bias?
200

This model proposes that the “central executive” allocates data to slave systems: the phonological loop and visuospatial sketchpad.  

What is the Working Memory Model?

200

This model of human cognition postulates that decision-making can be described as a function of both an intuitive, experiential, affective system (System I) and/or an analytical, rational system (System II).

What is The Dual-process model?

200

These are rules-of-thumb that can be applied to guide decision-making based on a more limited subset of the available information. Because they rely on less information, they facilitate faster decision-making than strategies that require more information.

What are Heuristics?

200

This type of memory includes contextual information about experienced events, including how things looked, sounded, and smelled, as well as the emotions that were experienced. 

What is Episodic memory?

200

This model of memory was supported by Scoville and Milner's study of patient H.M.

What is the Multi-Store Model of Memory?

200

The belief that people are using the internet as a personal memory bank.

What is the Google effect?

300

Mental representations that are derived from prior experience and knowledge, these help us to predict what to expect based on what has happened before. 

What are Schemas?

300

Going with one's first instinct and reaching decisions quickly based on automatic cognitive processes.

What is Intuitive thinking (System 1)?

300

A cognitive bias where an individual depends too heavily on an initial piece of information offered to make subsequent judgments during decision making.

What is Anchoring Bias?

300

A small spike in this hormone can aid memory processing but too much will interfere with it.

What is Cortisol/adrenaline?

300

According to Glanzer and Cunitz's (1966) study, why was the information provided at the beginning of the list recalled more than others?

Primacy effect - it had been stored in LTM as a result of rehearsal

300

A form of memory that focuses on how and where to access information so that you do not have to actually store the information in your brain.

What is transactive memory?

400

This is a highly detailed, exceptionally vivid 'snapshot' of the moment and circumstances in which surprising and consequential news was learned about.

What is Flashbulb Memory?

400

The ability to consider the relevant variables of a situation and to access, organize, and analyze relevant information to arrive at a sound conclusion.


What is Rational Thinking (System 2)?

400

This is when people react to a particular choice in different ways depending on how it is presented.

What is Framing effect?

400

The tendency for post-event information to interfere with the memory of the original event.

What is the Misinformation effect?

400

This study aimed to implant a false memory that participants had been lost in a mall when they were young. 

Loftus and Pickrell

400

This theory claims that we determine our own social and personal worth based on how we compare to others, which can be a problem if we are constantly presented with curated images of the "the perfect life" on social media.

What is Social Comparison Theory?

500

As shown in the study of HM, this type of memory is mostly likely guided by System 1 Thinking.

What is Procedural memory?

500

Used when we make a decision based on "what comes to mind." When asked: are there more English words with K in the first position or with K in the third position? - people will often say "in the first position" because these words come more easily to mind. It is actually the third position.

What is the Availability Heuristic?

500

This is when we leave out details when recalling a memory; this may be because the details were schema incongruent, they were not seen as important, or they were not understood.

What is Leveling?

500

Studies of flashbulb memories often focus on this, which is the difference in how people first hear of a newsworthy event - either from another person or watching it on television.

What is the reception context?