Important Names
Remembering
Knowledge & Intelligence
Judgement & Decision making I
Judgement & Decision making II
100

Procedure that studies false memories.

What is the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) procedure?

100

Refers to past learning interferences with current learning.

Proactive Interference 

100

The smallest unit of knowledge that can be either
true or false

What are Propositions?

100

Choosing the option with the greatest expected value.

What is utility maximization?

100

The drawing of conclusions based on a single case.

What is a "Man who" argument?

200

They experimented with the effects of context on word identification through spliced out words from participant's conversations.  

Who is Pollack and Pickett?

200

This term refers to knowledge that
describes what is typical of a given situation.

What is a Schema?

200

The degree to which a particular object, situation, or event is typical for its kind.

What is Typicality?

200

The tendency to replace a more complex judgement with a simpler one.

What is attribute substitution?

200

The belief that an event is less likely to happen if it has occurred more frequently than expected.

What is the Gambler's Fallacy?

300

In 1926, He argued that creative thought proceeds in four stages: preparation, incubation, illumination, and verification.

Who is Graham Wallas?

300

Banishing unwanted ideas, memories, and feelings from consciousness. 

What is Repression?
300

The tendency to be rigid in thinking about an object's function.

What is Functional Fixedness?

300

Two ways of thinking: fast and automatic, whereas the other is slower but more accurate.

What is the dual-process model?

300

The process in which you start with given premises and ask what follows from them.  

What is Deduction?

400

He coined the theory of eight multiple intelligences: Linguistic, Logical/Mathematical, Spatial, Bodily-Kinesthetic, Musical, Interpersonal, Intrapersonal, and Naturalist. 

Who is Howard Gardner?


400

The amount of time that elapsed between initial learning and subsequent retrival.

What is Retention Interval?

400

An ability to move one’s thoughts in novel,
unanticipated directions.

What is Divergent Thinking?

400

The ease with which examples come to mind as an index of frequency or likelihood.

What is Availability Heuristic?

400

The process through which you forecast about new cases based on observed cases.  

What is induction?

500

These two modified the original semantic theory that instead of hierarchies, semantic memory is organized by semantic distance (or relatedness). 

Who is Collins and Loftus?

500

Refers to when the internal experience is triggered by an object, but incorrectly attributed to another. 

What is Misattribution of familiarity?

500

Refers to how quickly one can verify a concept, dependent on pre-activated concepts.

What is Semantic Priming?

500

An assumption of homogeneity: an expectation that each individual is representative of the category overall. 

What is a Representativeness Heuristic?

500

The tendency to to continue endorsing a belief even when disconfirming evidence is undeniable. 

What is Belief Perseverance?