Psychology Quiz Chapter 7
Primacy effect
1) the tendency to recall the initial item or items in a series; 2) the tendency to form opinions of others based on first impressions
Recency effect
1) the tendency to recall the last item in a series; 2) the tendency for people to change their opinions of others based on recent interactions
Semantic memory
memory of general knowledge and information
Episodic memory
memory of specific experienced events
Explicit memory
memory of specific information
Implicit memory
memory of which you are not consciously aware; generally includes skills and procedures one has learned
Elaborative rehearsal
methods for remembering new information by creating meaningful links to information already known
Recall
nonimmediate retrieval or learned information
Recognition
a memory process in which one identifies objects or events that have previously ben encountered
Short-term memory
also called working memory, memory that holds information briefly before it is either stored in long-term emory or forgotten
Schema
an idea or mental framework that helps one organize and interpret information
Maintenance rehearsal
the repetition of new information in an attempt to remember it
Iconic memory
the sensory register that briefly holds mental images of visual stimuli
Echoic memory
the sensory register that briefly holds traces of aural stimuli
Encoding
the translation of information into a form that can be stored in memory
Long-term memory
the type of storage of memory capable or large and relatively permanent storage
Decay
disintegration; in psychology, the fading away of memory over time
Context-dependent memories
information that is more easily retrieved in the context or situation in which it was encoded and stored
State-dependent memories
information that is more easily retrieved when one is in the same physiological or emotional state as when the memory was originally encoded or learned
Relearning
learning something a second time, usually in less time than it was originally learned
Retrograde amnesia
the failure to remember events that occurred prior to physical trauma because of the effects of the trauma
Sensory memory
the immediate, initial recording of sensory information in the memory system
Anterograde amnesia
the inability to form new memories because of brain trauma
Infantile amnesia
the inability to remember events that occurred during one's early years (before age three)
Eidetic imagery
the maintenance of a very detailed visual memory over long periods of time
Storage
the maintenance of encoded information over time
Memory
the mental functions and processes by which information is encoded, stored, and retrieved; information stored in the mind
Chunking
the mental process of organizing information into meaningful unites, or 'chunks'
Retrieval
the process of recalling information from memory storage
Interference
the process that occurs when new information in short-term memory pushes or crowds out and replaces what was already there