This is the storehouse of all knowledge we are not currently thinking of.
What is long-term memory?
This is a measure of emotional reactivity and responsiveness in children, associated with emotional life and feelings of emotional control in adulthood.
What is temperament?
This study/practice technique helps memory by practicing even after perfect performance is achieved.
What is overtraining?
This parenting style is often described as being cold and punishing, with many rules that are not explained, but are enforced.
What is "authoritarian"?
My thoughts on things are rather two-dimensional,
Right and wrong, aren't concepts which are bendable!
If you break the law
you're punished till raw,
so says my morality which is _________________.
What is pre-conventional?
This is the process by which information is pushed "deeper" into the memory system where it can be processed and stored.
What is "encoding"?
This begins with puberty.
What is adolescence?
What is the "misinformation effect"?
This is one of the things that begins to decline with old age causing difficulty in processing information, but is not sensory.
What is "neural speed"?
My friends are always so skeptical,
that I say my family's esthetical.
When we sit down to eat,
the table is neat,
it's symmetric with my twins ________________.
This is the fancy word for forgetting, which is hilarious given that you can't remember it right now.
What is transience?
A cell with only 23 chromosomes, like a sperm or egg, is called this:
What is a gamete?
This type of memory is involved in remembering the details of an event as though you are reliving them.
What is "episodic" memory?
This stage of development, according to Piaget, is the one in which we begin to think about the future and ideals, which makes our conflicts with parents more intense.
What is "formal operations"?
This is the most durable type of explicit memory.
What is semantic?
This is the last portion of your brain to gain myelin. It is also the part of your brain associated with impulse control and planning.
What is the frontal lobe?
What is absentmindedness?
Despite the fact that much of our brain is the result of genetics, we can still make substantial changes to the brain via experience, due to this ability.
What is neural plasticity?
While some might have called it intellectual,
it caused controversy so perpetual.
For Freud's theory was based
on our bodily waste,
our eating, and all things ____________.
What is psychosexual?
When studying, you should engage in this process which can consist of visualizations and relating concepts and facts to your own experiences.
What is deep processing?
This is the first stage of cognitive development according to Piaget.
What is the sensorimotor period?
This mental task improves memory by way of placing similar content "together" so as to reduce the total amount of information needed to be encoded.
What is "chunking"?
Lead, mercury, and chickenpox are these types of negative influences on uterine development.
What are teratogens?
I've forgotten how to make a clay urn.
It's a process I can't clearly discern.
But I know I remember
because my fingers are limber,
and I get better quickly as I ___________.
What is relearn?