Cognitive Psychology Test 2 chapter quiz questions and lecture notes
Which of the following is an experimental procedure used to study how attention affects the processing of competing stimuli? a. Early selection b. Filtering c. Channeling d. Dichotic listening
D. dichotic listening
late selection theory in attention
Deutsch and Deutsch (Deutsch-Norman) theory
theorists and theory which states all stimuli 1. activate representations in long term memory, 2. are recognized--quickly forgotten unless important, 3. important stimuli selected for further processing--more likely to be remembered
Deutsch and Deutsch (Deutsch-Norman) theory
who proposed working memory in 2000. Defined it as a limited capacity system 1. temporary storage, 2. manipulation of information. For complex tasks (thinking and comprehension)
Baddeley
theorists: memory was twice as good when picture was presented after reading the passage.
Bransford and Franks
theorists who studied the effect of organization and prior knowledge to create meaning in vague passages.
Bransford and Franks study
Psychologists who developed the Human Information Processing Model
Broadbent and Treisman
Early selection theory: all or none, if it gets through the filter, you will process it. If it doesn't make it through the filter, you won't process it.
Broadbent's filter model
Early selection theories in attention
Broadbent's filter theory and Treisman's attenuation theory
said that without rehearsal, information decays. Decay occurs even if you do nothing over retention interval.
Brown-Peterson
theorists who claimed decay of info resulted in loss of information in STM
Brown-Peterson
whose demonstration: task 1--remember 3 letters, task 2 count backwards when number is present.
Brown-Peterson
Component in Broadbent's filter model: attends to physical characteristics of sound (tone, pitch, speed, accent). Only this message passes through to detector/detection device.
Filter/selective filter
odor memory. 30 seconds: high accuracy. 2 minutes: decreased performance.
Olfactory memory
coding in _____________ is auditory, visual, and some semantic
STM
adding a distractor at the end of a list of words disrupts the recency effect rather than the primacy effect--it disrupts ______________ rather than _____________ which proves the two systems exist.
STM, LTM
theorists who in 1997 demonstrated that performance became 90% accurate after 900 trials. Processing became automatic.
Schneider and Shiffrin
type of attention that does not move smoothly across the visual field (eye movements not smooth, can't see while moving eyes--eyes are quickly stopping and starting). You can compare two noncontiguous items easily.
Selective Attention
type of attention: filter out distractions, and focus on one event, ignore others.
Selective Attention
effects: familiar items, names, statements are favored. e.g. political commercials (rated as true because heard before, Perfect and Andrew 1994).
Propaganda effects
during task switching, new process can't be initiated. Processing of choosing a response to earlier stimulus still going on. Cost to task switching.
Psychological Refractory Period
can't form new memories (amnesia for future). intact STM, intact LTM prior to injury. No new LTMs. Explicit memory damaged. However, implicit memory somewhat intact. Handshake with pin.
anterograde amnesia
has two processes: rehearsal (active) and translates visual into phono. Takes place in phonological store/loop.
articulatory control process (ACP)
disproves short>long words theory and proves that short words=long words. Memory is impaired for both because you are trying to remember words while saying "the" repeatedly.
articulatory suppression
part of explicit memory: intentional memory. "remember the next 10 words." Studying for the exam.
conscious memory
Scene schema is a. rapid movements of the eyes from one place to another in a scene. b. short pauses of the eyes on points of interest in a scene. c. how attention is distributed throughout a static scene. d. knowledge about what is contained in a typical scene.
d. knowledge about what is contained in a typical scene
The primary effect of chunking is to a. maximize the recency effect. b. increase memory for items by grouping them together based on sound. c. develop a visual code to supplement a phonological code for the information. d. stretch the capacity of STM.
d. stretch the capacity of STM.
One function of ____ is controlling the suppression of irrelevant information. a. sensory memory b. the phonological loop c. articulatory suppression d. the central executive
d. the central executive
long-term memory is first divided into conscious ____________________ which includes episodic (personal events) and semantic (vocab, facts, knowledge)
declarative/explicit
Component in Broadbent's filter model: place where detection of higher order of characteristics (meaning) takes place after sound has passed through filter. Processes ALL info that enters.
detector/detection device
experiment in which two different messages are played simultaneously; sometimes "shadow" one of the messages.
dichotic listening task
part of declarative memory: personal events, linked to specific time e.g. when you first learned to ride a bike.
episodic
new component: back-up store, not well-defined.
episodic buffer
release from proactive interference
evidence for semantic coding in STM
_______________ that affect divided (switching) attention: stimulus modality (e.g. visual vs. auditory); memory codes (e.g. verbal vs. visual-spatial); response (e.g. manual vs. verbal).
factors
a type of distinctive encoding: ex: 9/11, JFK assassination, OJ Simpson trial
flashbulb memories
If you can rehearse info continually it can stay in your STM _____________
forever
test of declarative/explicit memory: write down everything you know about chapters 4, 5, 6
free recall
type of encoding that does not equal memory. You ___________ to study does not equal gaining memory of information to do perform well on test
intentional encoding
theory: selection at higher stages of processing. Decisions about access to awareness, encoding into memory, or responses (occur internally, NOT based on sensory info)
late selection
these state that attention occurs later in processing (doesn't occur at sensory input), occurs at representations in long-term memory.
late selection models
lateralization: language and interpretation of events is in the _______ hemisphere
left
type of memory in modal model: holds info for years
long-term memory (LTM)
____________ rehearsal: shallow processing, good for keeping info in STM/WM. Saying something over and over again.
maintenance rehearsal
information about stimuli, images, events, ideas, skills after the original information is no longer present.
memory
processes involved in retaining, retrieving, and using ____________
memory
quotes on ______________: "Everything in life is __________, save for the thing edge of the present." "I don't have a bad _____________...I remember every time I've forgotten something." "I know it's in there somewhere, I just can't find it."
memory
________________ to improve learning and memory: elaborate (highlighting is not enough), generate and test, organize (helps reduce load on memory), match learning and testing conditions, associate what you are learning to what you already know, avoid the 'illusion of learning" (familiarity does not mean comprehension), take breaks (memory is better for multiple short study sessions, consolidation), distributed versus massed practice effect (difficult to maintain close attention throughout a long study session, studying after a break gives feedback about what you already know).
methods
example of using _____________ to benefit. Telephone operators initially tried to get callers to forget number so they would call back and be charged again.
modal model
Can capacity theory explain results from dichotomous listening studies?
no, cannot explain Treisman's data from capacity viewpoint.
long-term memory is secondly divided into unconscious __________________ which includes priming effects and procedural memory
non-declarative/implicit
unconscious past experience that influences behavior. Incidental memory.
non-declarative/implicit memory
____________ for Atkinson and Shiffrin: STM is not directly involved processing (rehearsal is the only process in STM). People with good LTM and poor STM. Cannot account for modality specific distracters (strategy for Brown-Peterson task?)
problems
memory for how to do something (how to tie your shoes, reading, playing the piano, how to ride a bike)
procedural memory
component of WM where articulatory control process and visual scribe are present.
processing
type of amnesia: memory loss not caused by physical trauma, maybe repression, maybe selective forgetting.
psychotic amnesia
effect from serial position curve: better recall at the end of the list. Items still active in STM (and possibly SM) at time of recall. These are usually reported first.
recency effect
test of declarative/explicit memory: multiple choice test
recognition
when you stop ____________________ info, it ceases to be in your STM
rehearsing
Nickerson and Adams study with _____________ of coins trying to pick out correct coin.
repetition
type of priming: no conscious awareness of prior, repeated experiences with stimuli. But performance shows benefit. Lots of prior experience without remembering
repetition priming
type of memory in modal model: holds 5-7 items, holds info for 15-30 seconds (unless some control process).
short-term memory (STM)
Broadbent's filter model: directing processing to one sensory input (selected input fully processed for meaning, available to consciousness) and unselected stimuli (completely blocked, unavailable to consciousness).
simple on-off switch
Stroop experiment resulted in _______________ to name text color when incongruent with color word
slower
Zhang and Simon found that having ____________ boosts our ability to remember characters.
sound
in ___________ practice: the context differs each repetition, some likely to match context at retrieval, many short, s-___________ rather than one big long.
spaced
type of encoding: ________ practice better than massed practice (cramming). In massed practice: context at encoding similar for all repetitions.
spacing
capacity is unlimited?, duration is unlimited?, problems with storage are anterograde/retrograde amnesia
storage
component of WM where phonological loop and visuospatial sketchpad are present.
storage
consolidation that occurs at synapse, very rapid
synaptic consolidation
consolidation--reorganization of brain circuits. Takes long time.
systems consolidation
word-stem completion, word-picture fragment completion, repetition priming.
tests of implicit memory
in Treisman's Attenuation Theory: _____________ vary for different stimuli. E.g. your name, primed and expected stimuli, explains cocktail party/keg party phenomenon, some dichotic listening tasks.
thresholds
Broadbent's filter model: stimuli with no effect on behavior, not processed beyond the sensory level.
unattended stimuli
neglect that occurs when one can't attend to a part of visual space. e.g. when someone draws something but only draws half of it. (This is not vision impairment, instead attention is impaired.)
unilateral neglect
task that lead to more blood flow in the right hemisphere in the frontal lobe, the parietal lobe and the occipital lobe
visuo-spatial task
holds visual information (visual), holds spatial information (location), limited resource, and process (image refreshed by visual scribe).
visuospatial sketchpad
_________________ ______________ _______________ is eliminated under articulatory suppression.
word length effect
will remember more words when they are short than when they are long words
word-length effect
STM can be thought of as a part of _______________
working memory
concept that was proposed in 2000. Effects in search of a theory: word-length effect, articulatory suppression, phonological similarity.
working memory
storage and processing happen here
working memory
information learned previously interferes
proactive interference
moving attention requires three specific process which are?
1. disengaging, 2. moving attention, 3. focus
Who said the duration in STM determines transfer to LTM. (rehearsal serves as a way of maintaining information in STM--the longer the info is in STM the more likely it will be copied into LTM).
Atkinson and Shiffrin
model of memory proposed in 1968 which consists of structural fixtures and is defined in terms of capacity and duration. Were originally called stores. Copies of information are made and placed in each store (sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory).
Atkinson and Shiffrin's Modal Model of Memory
whose model of short-term memory: decays fairly rapidly in the absence of rehearsal within 30 seconds unless you do something. If you don't do anything, it is lost.
Atkinson and Shiffrin's model of STM
happens in patient studies where damage to the right parietal lobe (typically) has occurred.
Attentional Neglect
Theory: control tasks (not practiced, require attention), automatic tasks (well-practiced, do not require attention).
Automaticity
storage only happens here
short term memory
1964 study studied phonological confusability (errors sound based with letters that sound similar). Found that short-term memory likes sound based coding best. Ex: rehearsing a phone number out loud.
Conrad
type of attention: attending without looking. Without or separate from eye movements. Combined peripheral vision and mental focus.
Covert Attention
1972 studied depth of processing with three tasks: 1. case: is the word in capital letters? TABLE 2. Rhyme: Does the word rhyme with able? TABLE 3. Sentence: There was a chair next to the ___________. TABLE.
Craik and Lockheart
found that using meaning is a higher level of processing. sentence > case=rhyme. Case and rhyme are shallower processes. Elaborative rehearsal > maintenance rehearsal. Depth of processing = better memory.
Craik and Lockheart
What are some examples of attention?
Driving a car, listening to this lecture.
Whose experiments demonstrated object attention where same object cues were faster than different object cues (although it was the same distance). Indicates that when part of an object is cued, the whole object becomes activated.
Egly, Driver, and Rafal
experimenters who argued attention seems to be allocated to the object and not dependent on location.
Egly, Driver, and Rafal
type of encoding: Group 1: the bird flew down and caught the chicken. Group 2: The large screeching bird swooped down close to the group and grasped the chicken in his sharp talons.
Elaboration 2nd sentence is more elaborative
properties of ______________: capacity--presumably infinite. Duration--exists for the length of our lives, may never know for sure (accessible vs. available issue).
LTM
Automaticity theory employed in 1935 by _______________.
J. Ridley Stroop
impaired STM, could form new LT memories
K.F.
theorist and theory: (current theory) amount of attention is limited. Allocation policy--decide, moment by moment, how to allocate that attention, different factors influence the allocation policy.
Kahneman Capacity Theories
Capacity theory in attention
Kahneman divided attention
theorist and theory: capacities are limited. Attention=set of processes (for categorizing and recognizing stimuli).
Kahneman's Capacity Theory
coding in ______________ is primarily semantic (but also some auditory, visual)
LTM
is organized into two types of consciousness.
Long-term memory
1980 Revolutionary who showed process that take place in attention process. Used Discrimination task.
M. Posner
developed the self-generation effect in 1986, cues generated by yourself are best
Mantyla
who said in 1956 that the capacity of short-term memory is 7 plus or minus 2 items of information
Miller
type of attention: with eye movements, measured with eye tracking. What you are attending (directing your attention to) is what you're looking at.
Over Attention (Naturalistic)
Attention remained neutral at fixation point, then moved when target was presented.
Posner's attention experiments
Invalid claims to whose experiments: attention moved to the cued location, then moved again to uncued location. Reaction time was slower when compared to to the neutral condition.
Posner's attention experiments
Valid claims from whose experiments: Attention has to move (fixation to the cued location). Facilitates processing compared to the neutral condition.
Posner's attention experiments
theorist in 1960 who experimented with whole report and partial report procedures.
Sperling
reported one line only as cued (immediate cue vs. delayed cue). Testing both echoic and iconic memory--does not interfere with iconic by doing both iconic (with arrows). Did this by tones (high tone top row, middle tone middle row, low tone, bottom row).
Sperling's partial report procedure
experiment--name the color text, pits controlled vs. automatic processing against each other.
Stroop experiment
Component in Broadbent's filter model: receives output of detector.
short-term memory
Information in sensory memory that is attended enters............
short-term memory
discovered in 1970 that it is not the strength of cue but the match between encoding and retrieval that results in successful retrieval of information.
Thomson and Tulving
Who conducted dichotic listening studies in 1964 (mixed up, associating left and right ear meanings together) which presented problems to Broadbent's filter model?
Treisman
Leaky filter in which both attended and unattended info goes through attenuator (unattended is weaker).
Treisman's Attenuation Theory
Theorist and theory who said there is no filter, but an attenuator which analyzes incoming information (only as needed to identify attended message). For example, turning a radio dial and multiple selections can experience bleed-over from the same radio station's signal.
Treisman's Attenuation Theory
output is analyzed by dictionary unit. Threshold for activation of words: uncommon words=high, common words=middle, own name=very low.
Treisman's Attenuation Theory
who in 1962 tested two groups. Group one saw the word "cabaret" and group two didn't. When tested to complete the word fragment c_ _ AR_T Group one did better than group two which supports repetition priming.
Tulving
theorists who in 1968 studied Korsakoff's syndrome (damage to ability to form LTMs). Drink so much, can't eat anything. Can have a conversation, turn around and can't remember it.
Warrington and Weiskrantz
found in 1976 evidence for semantic coding in STM
Wickens
theorist who claimed interference resulted in loss of information in STM
Wickens
who in 1976 found that ___________ happens when we are trying to learn something recently but something learned in the past interferes.
Wickens, proactive interference
Psychologist in the 1800s who said "everyone knows what attention is, intuitive sense."
William James
neurological evidence for WM: spared language, impaired vnsuo-spaital abilities (visuospatial sketchpad is impaired).
William syndrome
Can capacity theory explain automaticity?
Yes, (e.g. Stroop) key issues such as task difficulty and controlled vs. automatic processing are backed up by capacity theory.
who in 1985 tested image-based coding in STM (Chinese radicals vs. characters). Some research points to our ability to code only visual information.
Zhang and Simon
According to the levels of processing theory, which of the following tasks will produce the best long-term memory for a set of words? a. Making a connection between each word and something you've previously learned b. Deciding how many vowels each word has c. Generating a rhyming word for each word to be remembered d. Repeating the words over and over in your mind
a. Making a connection between each word and something you've previously learned
The inability to assimilate or retain new knowledge is known as a. anterograde amnesia. c. the primacy effect. b. retrograde amnesia. d. the serial effect.
a. anterograde amnesia
Controlled processing involves a. close attention. b. ease in performing parallel tasks. c. overlearning of tasks. d. few cognitive resources.
a. close attention
llusory conjunctions are a. combinations of features from different stimuli. b. misidentified objects using the context of the scene. c. combinations of features from the masking field and the stimuli. d. features that are consistent across different stimuli.
a. combinations of features from different stimuli
The ability to pay attention to, or carry out, two or more different tasks simultaneously is known as a. divided attention. b. dual attention. c. divergenttasking. d. selective attention.
a. divided attention
According to the levels of processing theory, memory durability depends on how information is a. encoded. c. retrieved. b. stored. d. all of the above
a. encoded
The primacy effect is attributed to a. recall of information stored in LTM. b. a type of rehearsal that improves memory for all items in a list. c. recall of information still active in STM. d. forgetting of early items in a list as they are replaced by later items.
a. recall of information stored in LTM
Elaborative rehearsal of a word will LEAST likely be accomplished by a. repeating it over and over. b. linking the new word to a previously learned concept. c. using it in a sentence. d. thinking of its synonyms and antonyms.
a. repeating it over and over
Information remains in sensory memory for a. seconds or a fraction of a second. b. 15-30 seconds. c. 1-3 minutes. d. as long as it is rehearsed.
a. seconds or a fraction of a second.
If you remember something in terms of its meaning, the type of encoding you are using is a. semantic. b. acoustic. c. visual. d. iconic.
a. semantic
The cocktail party effect is a. the ability to pay attention to one message and ignore others, yet hear distinctive features of the unattended messages. b. the inability to pay attention to one message in the presence of competing messages. c. the diminished awareness of information in a crowd. d. the equal division of attention between competing messages.
a. the ability to pay attention to one message and ignore others, yet hear distinctive features of the unattended messages.
Memory performance is enhanced if the type of task at encoding matches the type of task at retrieval. This is called a. transfer-appropriate processing. c. elaborative rehearsal. b. episodic-based processing. d. personal semantic memory.
a. transfer-appropriate processing
Kahneman's Capacity Theory: attention ______________ resources to tasks. Whether or not you process info is determined by how much attention you have left. There is no early vs. late selection (rather it depends on how much attention is required for certain processes).
allocates (divides)
We are never doing two things at the same time--we are actually switching between tasks (e.g. pie graph of 1. messing around w/ snapchat filters, 2. watching AHS Cult, 3. texting Lazy Guys to order food, 4. reading ch 4.)
allocation of attention (limited capacity)
associated with damage to the PFL, normal performance tasks measuring (phonological loop, visuospatial sketchpad). Much greater impairment than normal subject when tasks performed simultaneously.
alzheimers patients
AKA Korsakoff's Syndrome in which STM is intact but can't form new LT memories.
anterograde amnesia
= selection for further processing. Limited mental energy 'powers' the cognitive system.
attention
Broadbent's conlusions on "Split Scan" dichotic listening task: ___________ must be switched to different channels, switched from ear to ear.
attention
Our _________________ can only be focused on a single activity at a time.
attention
focusing on specific features of the environment (usually at exclusion of others).
attention
this is a spotlight, move from location to location, and requires certain process.
attention
Conclusion of Egly, Driver, and Rafals' experiments with attention:
attention is object based, not space based.
failure to attend to the contralesional side of things (unilateral neglect, side opposite to lesion).
attentional neglect
in Treisman's Attenuation Theory, unattended stimuli are _______________--weakened rather than completely filter out. Allows processing of more than one input at a time. Both sensory and semantic (meaning) information affect attenuator control.
attenuated
type of encoding in which information is encoded implicit.
automatic encoding
processing that requires little/no attention, requires few cognitive resources, can occur simultaneously.
automatic processing
this type of processing is not always helpful, sometimes interferes with controlled processing, difficult to NOT follow through with an automatic task. However, it is most of the time helpful.
automatic processing--Stroop
Capacity theory can explain _________________.
automaticity (e.g. Stroop)
example of ____________________ study: flower. fruit-flower. Test: -___________, bloom-______________, fruit-_________________.
encoding specificity
The effective duration of short-term memory, when rehearsal is prevented, is a. a fraction of a second. b. 15-20 seconds. c. 1-3 minutes. d. 5-7 minutes.
b. 15-20 seconds.
type of retrieval: memory is better if context at retrieval matches context at encoding.
encoding specificity
The word-length effect shows that it is more difficult to remember a. a long list of words than a short list of words. b. a list of long words than a list of short words. c. a list of words that are all the same length than a list of words that are of different lengths. d. a list of words that are of different lengths than a list of words that are all the same length.
b. a list of long words than a list of short words
According to levels of processing theory, deep processing results in better memory. However, studies have shown that shallow processing can result in better memory when the individual encodes _____ and is tested _____. a. semantically; auditorially c. auditorially; semantically b. auditorially; auditorially d. semantically; visually
b. auditorially; auditorially
Carrie answers her phone with "Hello?" A response, "Hi, Carrie!" comes from the other end of the line. Carrie responds back with "Hi, Dad!" Carrie processed "Hi, Carrie" using a(n) a. auditory code in short-term memory. b. auditory code in long-term memory. c. iconic code in short-term memory. d. iconic code in long-term memory.
b. auditory code in long-term memory
Jocelyn is in an experiment where she is presented words representing categories. She is presented the word "furniture" in an earlier trial, which makes it easier for her later to recall the word "chair" because of the similarity of meaning. Jocelyn's memory enhancement for "chair" due to seeing the word "furniture" illustrates a. repetition priming. c. reconsolidation. b. conceptual priming. d. mental time travel.
b. conceptual priming
Dichotic listening occurs when a. the same message is presented to the left and right ears. b. different messages are presented to the left and right ears. c. a message is presented to one ear, and a masking noise is presented to the other ear. d. participants are asked to listen to a message and look at a visual stimulus, both at the same time.
b. different messages are presented to the left and right ears.
Hebb's idea of long-term potentiation, which provides a physiological mechanism for the long-term storage of memories, includes the idea of a. an increase in the size of cell bodies of neurons. b. enhanced firing in the neurons. c. larger electrical impulses in the synapse. d. the growth of new dendrites in neurons.
b. enhanced firing in the neurons
Students, beware! Research shows that _____ does not improve reading comprehension because it does not encourage elaborative processing of the material. a. organization b. highlighting c. making up questions about the material d. feedback
b. highlighting
The emphasis of the concept of working memory is on how information is a. permanently stored. b. manipulated. c. forgotten. d. perceived.
b. manipulated
This multiple choice question is an example of a ____ test. a. recall c. word-completion b. recognition d. personal semantic memory
b. recognition
Broadbent's filter model: _______________ happens when only certain amount of info makes it through to memory.
bottleneck
The "magic number," according to Miller, is a. 7 and 11. b. 5 plus 2. c. 7 plus or minus 2. d. lucky 13.
c. 7 plus or minus 2.
Which of the following is an example of a semantic memory? a. I remember my earth science teacher telling me how volcanoes erupt. b. I remember seeing a volcano erupt in Hawaii last summer. c. I remember the big island of Hawaii has many active volcanoes. d. I remember "volcano" was the first word on the list Juan read to me.
c. I remember the big island of Hawaii has many active volcanoes
Memory for a word will tend to be better if the word is used in a complex sentence (like "the bicycle was blue, with high handlebars and a racing seat") rather than a simple sentence (like "he rode the bicycle"). This probably occurs because the complex sentence a. causes more rehearsal. c. creates more connections. b. takes longer to process. d. is more interesting.
c. creates more connections.
Brief sensory memory for sound is known as a. iconic memory. b. primary auditory memory. c. echoic memory. d. pre-perceptual auditory memory.
c. echoic memory
The principle that we learn information together with its context is known as a. memory consolidation. c. encoding specificity. b. repetition priming. d. a self-reference effect.
c. encoding specificity
Phoebe steps up to the golf ball and hits it down the fairway. She sees that the ball is heading towards someone, so she yells "Fore!" After her two partners hit their balls, they pick up their bags and start walking to the next hole. But Phoebe says, "Wait a minute, I haven't teed off yet." This behavior shows that Phoebe has a problem with ____ memory. a. semantic c. episodic b. procedural d. working
c. episodic
Two types of declarative memory are _____ and _____ memory. a. semantic; implicit c. episodic; semantic b. implicit; episodic d. procedural; episodic
c. episodic; semantic
Location-based attention is when a. the enhancing effect of attention spreads throughout an object. b. attention is divided across two or more tasks simultaneously. c. people move their attention from one place to another. d. attention affects an entire object, even if it is occluded by other objects.
c. people move their attention from one place to another
According to Treisman's feature integration theory, the first stage of perception is called the _____ stage. a. featureanalysis b. focused attention c. preattentive d. letter analysis
c. preattentive
When a person is shadowing a message, he or she is a. silently following it mentally. b. ignoring it while paying attention to another message. c. saying the message out loud. d. thinking about something closely related to the message.
c. saying the message out loud
The predominant type of coding in LTM is a. phonological. b. concrete. c. semantic. d. visual.
c. semantic
The three structural components of the modal model of memory are a. receptors, occipital lobe, temporal lobe. b. receptors, temporal lobe, frontal lobe. c. sensory memory, short-term memory, long-term memory. d. sensory memory, iconic memory, rehearsal.
c. sensory memory, short-term memory, long-term memory.
The standard model of consolidation proposes that the hippocampus is a. strongly active for both new memories as they are being consolidated and memories for events that occurred long ago and are already consolidated. b. strongly active for long-ago memories that are already consolidated but becomes less active when memories are first formed and being consolidated. c. strongly active when memories are first formed and being consolidated but becomes less active when retrieving older memories that are already consolidated. d. uninvolved in memory consolidation.
c. strongly active when memories are first formed and being consolidated but becomes less active when retrieving older memories that are already consolidated.
The defining characteristic of implicit memory is that a. it always leads to episodic memory for events. b. it is enhanced by the self-reference effect. c. we are not conscious we are using it. d. people use it strategically to enhance memory for events.
c. we are not conscious we are using it
___________ of short-term memory is measured by memory span test.
capacity
____________ _______________ is also a component of WM. This direct the visuospatial sketchpad, episodic buffer, and phonological loop directing them.
central executive
coordinates the two subsidiary systems: encoding strategies, attention switching, mental manipulation.
central executive
grouping things together by applying meaning
chunking
items are meaningful ______________ of information (can be letters, numbers, but also words, dates, etc.)
chunks
Problem for Broadbent's model: report salient words from un-shadowed channel (e.g. your name, COPS! at keg party).
cocktail party effect
Evidence against Broadbent's Filter theory: we do process unattended info: two experiments/situations?
cocktail party/keg party effect and dichotic listening task
Problem with levels of processing theory: deep processing result in better memory, better memory is due to deep processing.
concept must be defined indpendently from findings. Circular reasoning--failure to define terms independently from results. There is no independent method to show deep vs. shallow processing effects on memory.
type of priming: concepts stored in long-term semantic memory influence your memory.
conceptual priming
Actual findings: what you study has direct impact on how you are tested and how well you perform. If you study rhyme you will perform better when prompted with rhyme. If you study better with semantic, you will perform better when prompted with semantic in test.
context effect
happens in retrieval--transfer appropriate processing, context-dependent, state-dependent.
context effects
memory is best when encoding and retrieval conditions match. Environment-context dependent (classroom, underwater vs. above water). State: state-dependent (caffeine, mood, alcohol).
context effects
transfer appropriate processing. Studied by _______________ in 1977. Study: RHYME: does bike rhyme with like? SEMANTIC: The boy rode the ____________. Will bike complete the sentence? Test: WHAT WOULD LOP PREDICT? SEMANTIC>RHYME
context effects
processing that requires attention, requires cognitive resources, usually only one at a time
controlled processing
test of declarative/explicit memory: essay question, fill-in-the-blank
cued recall
effect from serial position curve: better recall from the beginning of the list, items rehearsed more frequently.
primacy effect
type of encoding: using something that will set a thing apart from the other things around it. thing thing thing thing OBJECT thing thing thing thing. Making middle word ______________ improves memory. von Resorff effect
distinctiveness
type of attention: processing in two distinct channels at the same time (paying attention to more than one thing, similar tasks interfere with one another).
divided attention
type of attention: situations in which we try to __________ our ____________ between two things such as driving and talking, cell-phone debate while driving, CNN headlines...
divided attention
Summary of recent research article on ________ debate: Undertaking complex mental tasks can reduce a driver's ability to detect visual targets by as much as 30 percent. Research on driving in real traffic confirms that mental workload can interfere with the capacity to detect visual targets, discriminate among them, and select a response. Higher-level mental tasks take attentional resources away from the road, resulting in all-too-familiar post-acciendent reports: "I didn't expect it" or "I saw it too late"
divided attention: driving and talking on the phone
doing two tasks at once (assume doing both doesn't change how you do either).
dual task (switching attention)
information may stay in STM unrehearsed for about 15-30 seconds. If rehearsed, can stay in STM forever but unpractical.
duration of short-term memory
Broadbent's filter model: filtered before information is analyzed for meaning.
early selection
theory: not fully perceptually analyzed or encoded before selection for further processing or rejected as irrelevant.
early selection
auditory information. Capacity: 5-9 pieces of information. Duration: 2 seconds
echoic memory
type of encoding that requires use of strategy including repetition, elaboration, and self-referential.
effortful encoding
______________ rehearsal: deeper processing. Involves meaning or relationship. Levels of processing impacts LTM.
elaborative
the process of getting things into memory
encoding
visual information. Capacity: about 5-9 pieces of information. Duration: about 1/2 to 1 second (500 to 1000 milliseconds).
iconic store (memory)
procedural memory--how to do something is part of ____________ memory
implicit
not consciously learning
implicit learning
type of memory: procedural memory, priming effects, propaganda effects.
implicit memory
type of amnesia: no memories prior to age 3.
infantile amnesia
this type of attention is obtained even if occluded (evidence of occlusion heuristic).
object attention
Two tasks can be done simultaneously if __________________________ or ___________________________.
one activity is automatic or attention alternates between the two tasks.
encoding strategy--grouping words by meaning is easier to remember
organization
retrieval of existing memories, not conscious BUT impacts subsequent thoughts and actions
priming
types of _________________: conceptual, perceptual, repetition
priming
type of priming: information in memory enhances ability to identify something based on its physical features. Do not need to consciously recall seeing the priming item. Do not need to consciously encode the priming item.
perceptual priming
rhyming words<non-rhyme words: map, tap, cap, slap, rap < pen, bar, cow, rig, fin
phonological similarity
holds phonological information (store=2 seconds [passive] limited capacity). Has articulatory control process (ACP) rehearsal (active) and translates visual into phono.
phonological store/loop
task that led to more blood flow to the left hemisphere in the frontal lobe and the parietal lobe.
phonological task
associated with the ______________ _______________ in the brain
prefrontal cortex
theorists who in 1966 studied free recall vs cued recall practices in _________________ of information.
retrieval
(soap opera amnesia). No memory for the past. Makes by time of damage. Memories for events closer to time of injury more impaired.
retrograde amnesia
lateralization: visuospatial processing and face processing is in the ________________ hemisphere
right
type of encoding: information related to oneself is remembered better. Also requires deeper processing.
self-reference effect
coding in STM that is meaning-based.
semantic
part of declarative memory: knowledge about the world, vocab, not tied to any specific time e.g. what a bike is. Can originally be episodic, but as time passes it moves to semantic memory as the this info is lost.
semantic
capacity=large (e.g. we are constantly experiencing sensory info). Duration=very short.
sensory memory
only processes sensory information: iconic=visual, echoic=auditory, olfactory=odor
sensory memory
type of memory in modal model: initial stage holds info for very short time.
sensory memory
unless selected for further storage from _______________, you will be unconscious of this info.
sensory memory
Component in Broadbent's filter model: holds incoming information for short period of time, transfers info to filter.
sensory store/register
experiment with no recency effect (distractor task eliminates items from STM). Primacy effect still present (information in LTM is not affected by distractor task).
serial position curve with distractor