Neuroscience
Motivated Forgetting
Miscellaneous
Eyewitness Testimony
Memory and Aging
100

What part of the brain shrinks most rapidly when we age?

Frontal lobe

100

What is positivity bias?

We are more likely to recall positive memories as we age

100

What is the dud effect?

When people are more wrong and confident in mistakes due to "duds" included in the line-up. 

100

What is change blindness blindness?

When we believe we aren't affected by change blindness

100

Which type of memory is most severely impacted by aging?

Episodic

200

Where do we see less activity when encoding faces from other races?

Fronto-parietal network

200

What is psychogenic amnesia?

Amnesia without clear neurological cause.

200

This disorder is characterized by face blindness

Prosopagnosia

200

What is the weapon focus effect?

When the presence of a weapon draws attentional resources away from other details.

200

This type of memory refers to remember to do something in the future.

Prospective memory

300

During retrieval suppression, how do PFC and hippocampal activity change?

PFC activity increases; hippocampal activity decreases

300

What is hypermnesia?

Improved recall from repeated testing on same material. 

300

What is the difference between suppression and repression?

Suppression is choosing to forget. Repression is unconsciously forgetting as an automatic defense mechanism (freud's term). 

300

During an interview your asked a leading question that alters your memory of the crime. What type of interference is this?

Retroactive

300

Episodic memories start to steeply decline after what age?

60

400

During thought substitution, how do PFC and hippocampal activity change?

PFC activity increases; hippocampal activity increases

400

Which hypothesis claims we exert more attentional resources when told to remember?

Selective rehearsal hypothesis

400

What are three effective techniques for interviewing an eye witness?

Ask open ended questions, don't interrupt, ask relevant follow-ups, encourage reinstatement of context.

400

What are three ways lab research differs from real-life eye witness experiences?

bystander vs. victim, stress, number of perspectives, time viewing scene/perp, consequences of inaccuracy.

400

Why might exercise help fight cognitive decline?

Better blood flow to brain; better arterial elasticity 

500

Neurally, how does retrieval suppression decrease emotional intensity?

Decrease amygdala activity

500

What are the two hypotheses that explain why directed forgetting works?

Retrieval inhibition and context shift.

500

What are the two ways we can stop the retrieval of an unwanted memory?

Direct suppression and thought substitution

500

What does unconscious transference mean?

When you misidentify a familiar but innocent face as belonging to a culprit

500

This specific hypothesis claims that issues with episodic memory are due to a decline in learning capacity

Associative deficit hypothesis