Perception & Sensation
Thinking & Decision-Making
Memory Systems
Memory Processes
Intelligence & Assessment
100

This is the process of organizing and interpreting sensory information.

What is perception?

100

A mental grouping of similar objects, events, or ideas.

What is a concept?

100

The model of memory involving encoding, storage, and retrieval.

What is the information-processing model?

100

The process of getting information into memory.

What is encoding? 

100

The ability to learn from experience, solve problems, and adapt to new situations.

What is intelligence?

200

The tendency to perceive objects as unchanging despite changes in sensory input.

What is perceptual constancy?

200

The most typical example of a category, used for comparison.

What is a prototype?

200

The memory stage that briefly holds sensory information.

What is sensory memory?

200

This type of encoding involves the meaning of words and concepts.

What is semantic encoding?

200

The psychologist who developed the first modern intelligence test.

Who is Alfred Binet?

300

The brain's use of prior knowledge and expectations to interpret sensory info.

What is top-down processing?

300

A problem-solving method that guarantees a solution but may be inefficient.

What is an algorithm?

300

Also known as working memory, this temporarily stores and manipulates information.

What is short term memory?

300

The tendency to recall information better when in the same context or state.

What is context-dependent (or state-dependent) memory?

300

A test that predicts future performance and capacity to learn.

What is an aptitude test?

400

Inattentional blindness and change blindness are examples of this perceptual limitation.

What is selective attention?

400

The tendency to search for or favor information that confirms our beliefs.

What is confirmation bias?

400

Memories of facts and experiences we can consciously declare.

What is explicit memory (or declarative memory)?

400

The disruptive effect of new information on the recall of old information.

What is retroactive interference?

400

The statistical consistency of a test’s results.

What is reliability?

500

This binocular cue helps us perceive depth by comparing images from both eyes.

What is retinal disparity?

500

Making judgments based on how well something matches our existing prototype.

What is the representativeness heuristic?

500

The brain structure involved in forming new explicit memories.

What is the hippocampus?

500

This term refers to the inability to form new memories after brain damage.

What is anterograde amnesia?

500

The psychologist who proposed a triarchic theory of intelligence.

Who is Robert Sternberg?