You use both of your eyes for this type of cue
BINOCULAR CUE
Focusing on one thing in particular and not being able to focus on something as a result
EXAMPLE: can't do math while driving
SELECTIVE ATTENTION
A step by step procedure that guarantees a solution
Algorithm
Kara is going to the grocery store and to remember her list she groups her foods into specific categories (Dairy, Proteins, Fruits) What type of mnemonic is this?
Chunking
A mindset where you believe intelligence is changeable
Growth Mindset
Through experience, we form concepts that organize and interpret new information called...
Schemas
Failure to see visible objects when our attention is directed elsewhere
INATTENTIONAL BLINDNESS
Thinking you know someone's name but you cannot recall it
Tip of the Tongue
Studying by focusing on the facts and not the meaning of information that has to be remembered involves____
Shallow Processing
Which person designed a aptitude test with a goal of measuring each child's mental age
Binet
Used to test depth perception in babies
VISUAL CLIFF
With a brief visual interruption, a person doesn't notice the person they were talking to change
Change Blindness
Where we approach a problem with a mindset that has worked before
(An example of fixation)
Mental Set
Tim can no longer create new memories as a result of an accident. What type of amnesia is this?
Anterograde
Type of intelligence articulating vocabulary and applied skills gained through experience
Crystallized Intelligence
You see what you are primed or expected to see
Perceptual Set
Serene is in a hotel room with a cake that needs slicing, but she does not have a knife. She used a strand of dental floss instead. Serena has overcome which barrier of problem-solving?
Functional Fixedness
Can nudge people toward beneficial decisions by posing a question a certain way
Two Types of Memories which are explicit that include facts and general knowledge and experienced events
Semantic and Episodic
The two categories of intelligent tests which assess people's mental aptitudes
Achievement and Aptitude Test
Your perception uses this to take all information around you to make a unified whole image
example. closure and figure ground
gestalt principle
You can pick your name out of a loud room filled with different conversations happening at once
Cocktail party effect
What are the 3 Retention Measures for Learning
1. Recall
2. Recognition
3. Relearning
What helps us understand how specific cues will most effectively trigger memories
Encoding Specificity Principles
IQ scores rising over generations across the globe
Flynn Affect