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Psych Module 22 and 23

Terms

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Cognition
Mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering, and communicating
Concepts
A mental grouping of similar objects, events, ideas, or people
Prototype
A mental image or best example of a category. Provides an easy method for matching new items to a category
Algorithms
Step-by-step procedures that guarantee a solution (looking through every isle of a store to find the thing you need)
Heuristics
Thinking strategy that often allows us to make judgments and solve problems efficiently (speedier, but more error-prone than algorithms)
Insight
a sudden and often novel realization of the solution to a problem (contrasts with strategy-based solutions)
Activity in the ____________ accompanies insight solutions to word problems
right temporal lobe
Conformation bias
A tendency to search for information that confirms your preconceptions
Fixation
Inability to see a problem from a new perspective
Functional fixation
The tendency to think of things only in terms of their usual functions (looking for a screwdriver when a dime would work)
We usually make everyday decisions based on...
Intuition
The Representativeness Hueristic
Judging the liklihood of things in terms of how well they seem to represent particular prototypes; may lead a person to ignore other relevant information
The Avalibility Hueristic
Estimating the liklihood of events based on their availability in memory; if instances come readily to mind, we presume such events are common (words beginning with "k" seem more common than words with "k" as the third letter, since we can think of them quickly, but the reverse is true)
Overconfidence
The tendency to be more confident than correct-- to overestimate the accuracy of one's beliefs and judgments
Framing
The way an issue is posed
To scare people, you should frame risks as _______, not _______
Numbers, not percentages
The belief Perseverance Phenomenon
Clinging to one's initial conceptions after the basis on which they were formed has been discredited
If asked to choose between two things, we often go with __________
the one we recognize
Absent-Mindedness
Inattention to detail, leads to encoding failure
Transience
Memory storage decay over time
Blocking
Inaccessibility of stored information
Misattribution
Confusing the source of information (thinking something in a dream really happened)
Suggestibility
Lingering effects of misinformation (asking a question in a certain way may cause a false memory to form)
Bias
Belief-colored recollection
Persistence
Unwanted memories (being haunted by something horrible)
Forgetting curve
Forgetting is initially rapid, then levels off
Retrieval Failure
We have stored a memory, but can't retrieve it (cues can sometimes help)
Interference
Learning items may interfere with retrieving others, especially when items are similar
Proactive Interference
Old stuff interfering with new stuff
Retroactive Interference
New stuff interfering with old stuff
Positive Transfer
When old information can help us learn new information (Latin can help us learn Spanish)
Information learned right before sleep is protected from _______ interference
Retroactive
Why do we repress painful memories?
To protect our self-concept and to minimize anxiety
Ways memories can be altered
During encoding, or during withdrawal
Misinformation Effect
After exposure to subtle misinformation, many people misremember, and after enough, false memories can be created
Source Amnesia or Source Misattribution
Attributing to the wrong source an event we have experienced, heard about, read about, or imagined (recognizing someone but not knowing who or why)
SQ3R
Survey Question Read Rehearse Review Ways to improve memory
The most common response to a traumatic event is...
To be haunted by it, not to forget

Deck Info

38

laurenmccrystal

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