Thinking & Problem-Solving
Intelligence
Memory Loss
Memory Duration
Mystery Box
Mystery Box II
100

This effect occurs when exposure to certain words or images subtly prepares a person to respond in a particular way later on.

Priming

100

This effect occurs when a member of a group internalizes positive stereotypes and, as a result, performs better than expected on an assessment.

Stereotype lift

100

This condition involves the inability to form new memories after a brain injury, even though past memories may remain intact.

Anterograde amnesia

100

This system holds a limited amount of information—about seven items—for roughly 20–30 seconds unless it is rehearsed.

Short-term memory

100
These hallucinations may occur as we transition from wakefulness to sleep.

hypnagogic sensations

100

This theory suggests that dreams are just the brain's attempt to make sense of random neural firings as we sleep. 

activation-synthesis theory

200

This type of thinking involves generating many possible solutions to a problem, often used in brainstorming sessions.

Divergent thinking

200

This theory of intelligence posits three broad types of intelligence: practical, analytical and creative.

Triarchic theory of intelligence

200

This progressive brain disorder destroys memory and cognitive abilities, often beginning with difficulty forming new memories. It is associated with low levels of ACh.

Alzheimer's disease

200

This relatively permanent and limitless storehouse contains knowledge, skills, and experiences that can last a lifetime.

Long-term memory

200

This medical exam involves visualizing blood flow and oxygen metabolism in order to infer brain activity.

fMRI

200
A correlational study cannot be used to study this type of relationship between variables.

cause and effect

300

This occurs when the way information is presented influences the decisions people make, even when the facts stay the same.

Framing

300

This analytical technique seeks to correlate specific intelligence measures to one another in order to infer one's general intelligence.

factor analysis

300

This memory error occurs when I embellish a real memory with details that didn't really happen.

Imagination inflation

300

This deeper form of rehearsal links new information to existing knowledge, greatly improving long-term retention.

Elaborative rehearsal

300

This autoimmune disorder develops when the immune system attacks ACh receptors on neurons.

myasthenia gravis (MG)

300

Cones are primarily located in this part of the eye's retina.

fovea

400

This problem-solving "set" can become an obstacle when you keep using the same approach that worked before—even if it’s not helping now.

Mental set

400

Bodily-kinesthetic, interpersonal, verbal-linguistic, and naturalistic are four types of intelligence in this theory.

Multiple intelligences

400

This type of interference happens when old information disrupts learning or recalling newer information.

Proactive interference

400

This brief initial stage of memory captures exact sensory information for a split second before it fades, such as iconic or echoic inputs.

Sensory memory

400

This part of the brain is responsible for balance and muscle movement.

Cerebellum

400

This is the group that receives some kind of modification or intervention in an experiment.

experimental group

500

This happens when earlier stimuli influence your interpretation of new information without your conscious awareness—like seeing “yellow” and then noticing bananas faster.

Priming

500

A type of reliability in which two "halves" of a test are of equal difficulty or produce similar scores.

split-half reliability

500

This kind of interference occurs when new information makes it harder to remember older information.

Retroactive interference

500

This active processing system manipulates information you are currently using, such as when solving a math problem or listening and responding at the same time.

Working memory

500

This refers to a tendency to approach decision-making in a particular way based on past experiences -- sometimes resulting in inflexibility. 

Mental set

500

This is a sample which can be generalized to a specific broader population.

Representative sample