Thinking & Problem-Solving
Memory Basics
Encoding, Storing, & Retrieving
Intelligence & Testing
Cognitive Errors & Biases
100

The “best example” or mental image of a category (like a robin for “bird”) is known as what?

Prototype
100

Memories of facts and experiences that we consciously know and can declare are called what?

Explicit (Declarative) Memory

100

Studying small amounts over several days is known as what, and why is it more effective?

Distributed practice; because it uses the spacing effect

100

An AP exam is an example of which type of test?

Achievement Test

100

Using old strategies even when new ones are better

Mental set

200

Jamie judges plane crashes as more common because she sees them on the news a lot. Which heuristic is she relying on?

Availability Heuristic

200

According to the Levels of Processing Theory, which type of processing leads to the strongest memory: structural, phonetic, or semantic? 

Semantic

200

Name the memory device in which you imagine placing items along a familiar pathway.

Method of loci

200

Test performance decreases when someone is worried about confirming a negative group belief. What is this called?

Stereotype threat

200

You stay in a boring 3-hour movie just because you paid for the ticket. What psychological concept is influencing your decision?

Sunk-cost fallacy

300

When you can’t see new uses for a paperclip because you only think of it as something to hold papers, you’re experiencing what?

Functional Fixedness

300

Which type of sensory memory lasts only a few tenths of a second and captures visual information?

Iconic Memory

300

Remembering the first items on a list best is called what?

Primacy effect

300

When a test yields similar results when taken again, it demonstrates what type of reliability?

Test-retest reliability

300

Presenting a product as "91% fat-free" instead of "9% fat utilizes what psychological concept?

Framing

400

A person believes a coin “must” land on heads after five tails in a row. What psychological concept is this?

Gambler's Fallacy

400

List the three stages of the multistore model IN ORDER.

Sensory memory → Short-term memory → Long-term memory

400

What type of amnesia involves difficulty forming new memories but allows old ones to stay intact?

Anterograde amnesia

400

Explain the difference between general intelligence (g) and multiple intelligences.

g: a single underlying factor that influences all cognitive abilities

Multiple intelligences: intelligence is several independent abilities (linguistic, logical, spatial, etc.)

400

A person believes a quiet, bookish man is more likely to be a librarian than a truck driver, even though there are far more truck drivers. What heuristic is this?

Representativeness heuristic

500

Name the two types of thinking associated with creativity and show how they differ.

Divergent thinking: generating many possible solutions

Convergent thinking: narrowing down to a single correct answer

500

A component of working memory that temporarily stores and manipulates verbal and auditory information.

Phonological Loop.

500

Explain the difference between context-dependent and state-dependent memory.

Context-dependent: recall is best in the same physical environment

State-dependent: recall is best in the same internal state (mood, physiological state)

500

What is the Flynn Effect?

The steady increase in average intelligence test scores over generations.

500

When a person is shown the word "doctor" and is then quicker to recognize the word "nurse" than if they were shown an unrelated word first, like "chair".

Priming