Chapter 7 Barron's Ap Psychology Flashcards ionicons-v5-c

three-box/information-processing model

sensory, encoding, short-term/working, long-term and retrieval

George Sperling

demonstrated sensory memory by flashing a grid of 9 letters for 1/20th of a secondalso: iconic memory

sensory memory

a split-second holding tank for incoming sensory information

iconic memory

a split-second perfect photograph of a scene

echoic memory

a split-second perfect memory of a sound

selective attention

determines what is encoded from sensory memory to short-term memory

short-term (working) memory

memories currently using and are aware of in consciousness- short-term memories will fade in 10 to 30 seconds if mused - capacity is limited to about 7 items

chunking

grouping items in about 7memory tool

mnemonic aids

memory aidsmemory tool

rehearse

repeatmemory tool

long-term memory

permanent storage

episodic memory

memories of specific events, stored in a sequential series of events

semantic memory

general knowledge of the world, stored as facts, meanings, or categories rather than sequentially

procedural memory

memories of skills and how to perform them

explicit (declarative) memory

conscious memories of facts or events we actively tried to remember

implicit (nondeclarative) memory

unintentional memories that we might not even realize we have

eidetic (photographic) memory

the ability to remember with great accuracy visual information on the basis of short-term exposure

Alexandra Luria

studied a patient with eidetic memory who could repeat a list of 70 letters or digits and remember it up to 15 years later

levels of processing model

- long/short-term memory doesn't exist- instead, deeply (elaboratively) or shallowly (maintenance) memory

retrieval

two types of retrieval: recognition and recall

recognition

the process of matching a current event or fact with one already in memory

recall

retrieving a memory with an external cue

primacy effect

predicts that we are more likely to recall items presented at the beginning of a listcompare: recency effect

recency effect

predicts that we are more likely to recall items presented at the end of a listcompare: primacy effect

serial position effect (curve)

when recall of a list is affected by the order of items in a listprimacy effect and recency effect

tip-of-the-tongue-phenomenon

condition of being almost, but not quite, able to remember something; used to investigate the nature of semantic memory

semantic network theory

memories are linked to one another like spiderwebs

flashbulb memory

highly detailed memory of the moment and circumstances in which a piece of surprising news is heard

state-dependent memory

recalling events encoded while in a particular state of consciousness, like sleepiness

mood congruent memory

the greater likelihood of recalling an item when our mood matches the mood we were in when the event happened

Elizabeth Loftus

showed that recovered memories could be constructed or false recollections of events

constructed memory

may report false details of a real event or might even be a recollection of an event that never occured

decay

not using a memory or connections to a memory for a long period of time

relearning

after learning and forgetting, learning again becomes faster

interference

other information competes with what you're trying to recalltwo types: retroactive and proactive

retroactive interference

learning new information interferes with the recall of older informationcompare: proactive interference

proactive interference

old information interferes with the recall of newer informationcompare: retroactive interference

anterograde amnesia

old memories can be recalled, new memories (except procedural) cannot be made

long-term potention

repeated firings between neurons strengthen the connection between them

phonemes

the smallest units of sound used in a languagecompare: morphemes

morphemes

the smallest unit of meaningful soundcompare: phonemes

language acquisition

natural unconscious process of language development in humans that occurs without instruction, but needs exposure1. babbling 2. telegraphic

language acquisition theory

the ability to learn a language rapidly as children

Noam Chomsky

language acquisition devicealso called nativist theory of language acquisition

language acquisition device

the ability to learn a language quickly as childrenalso called nativist theory of language acquisition

babbling stage

innate, represents a baby's experimentation with phonemesafter this stage, the baby loses the phonemes unused in the primary language

telegraphic

second stage in language acquisitioncombination of the words into simple commands and sentences; meaning clear, syntax absent

overgeneralization

misapplication of grammar rules

linguistic relativity hypothesis

Benjamin Whorflanguage may control or limit our thinking- studies show effect of labeling on how we think about people, objects, or ideas, but do not show that language changes what we can think about

prototype

what concepts are based on, the most typical example of a particular concept

image

mental pictures created in mind, not necessarily visual

algorithm

a problem solving technique that guarantees the correct solution by trying every possibility

heuristic

a rule of thumb, generally but not always truetypes: availability heuristic and representativeness heuristicaffected by: belief bias and belief perseverance

availability heuristic

judging a situation based on examples of similar situations that come to mind initially

representativeness heuristic

judging a situation based on how similar the aspects are to prototypes the person holds in his or her mind

belief bias

illogical conclusions in order to confirm our preexisting beliefs

belief perseverance

tendency to maintain a belief even after the evidence we used to form the belief is contradictedcompare: confirmation bias

rigidity (mental set)

the tendency to fall into established thought patterns

functional fixedness

an example of rigiditythe inability to see a new use for an object

confirmation bias

the tendency to look for evidence that confirms our beliefs and ignore evidence that contradicts what we think is truecompare: belief perseverence

framing

the way a problem is presented

creativity

original/novel but still fits the situation

convergent thinking

thinking pointed toward one solution

divergent thinking

thinking that searches for multiple possible answers to a questionassociated with creativity