Memory in Infants
Memory in Children
Children's Eyewitness Testimony
Memory & Metamemory in Elderly
Language Development
100

A method for measuring infant cognition using a mobile attached to their foot

What is the conjugate reinforcement technique?

100

Intentional, goal-oriented activities we use to improve our memories

What are memory strategies?

100

In the Sam Stone study, this plus suggestion led to the most false memories in children

What is stereotype?

100

The lifespan approach emphasizes that development continues beyond this life stage

What is young adulthood?

100

Sounds involving vowels that infants make around 2 months

What is cooing?

200

Infants as young as this age (in days) can visually recognize their mothers

What is 3 days?

200

The problem of not using memory strategies effectively, even when you know them

What is utilization deficiency?

200

Children in this condition of the Sam Stone study were highly accurate

What is the control condition?  

200

Elderly adults show age similarities on these types of working memory tasks

What are simple tasks?

200

Sounds involving vowels and consonants that infants make around 6 months

What is babbling?

300

By this age (in months), infants can create associations between two objects even without reinforcement

What is 6 months?

300

Memory for experiences and information related to yourself

What is autobiographical memory?

300

This age group (older or younger) provides more accurate eyewitness testimony

Who are older children?

300

This type of long-term memory shows minimal age differences (crosswords, general knowledge)

What is semantic memory?

300

Using context to make reasonable guesses about a word's meaning after 1-2 exposures

What is fast mapping?

400

These two factors influence infant memory, similar to adult memory

What are context effects and spacing effect?

400

The process of trying to identify the origin of a particular memory

What is source monitoring?

400

Children make more errors when interviewers use this type of tone and complex language

What is emotional tone?

400

The belief in one's own potential to perform well on memory tasks

What is memory self-efficacy?

400

The tendency to add customary morphemes to create new forms like 'runned' or 'mouses'

What is overregularization?

500

The researcher famous for the mobile and train tasks studying infant memory

Who is Carolyn Rovee-Collier?

500

Three memory strategies children learn: this one (repeating), organization, and imagery

What is rehearsal?

500

Children with this cognitive characteristic recalled less information than typically developing children

What are intellectual disabilities?

500

This hypothesis explains why elderly adults struggle more with explicit recall than recognition

What is the contextual-cues hypothesis?

500

Social rules and world knowledge that allow people to communicate appropriately with others

What is pragmatics?