psych 101--exam 2
By age ______, a child's vision becomes similar to an adult's
3 or 4
4 different types of attachment, and body comfort (the monkey experiment)
???
According to the strange situation experiment conducted by mary ainsworth, ______ infants often show little to no distress in separation episodes, and when the mother returns, the infants tend to ignore and avoid her, focusing instead on something else in the room
insecure-avoidant
Erik Erikson defined ______ as the ability to fuse one's identity with another's without the fear of losing it.
intimacy
Which of the following is true of the functions of sleep?
it consolidates memory
Which of the following is true of human brain development
it continues after birth
Which of the following is true about short-term memory?
it is a place to temporarily store information when one needs while working on a problem
What does neuroscientific research on hypnosis indicate?
it is a real activity that the brain experiences
Which of the following best describes the function of the visuospatial sketch pad?
it provides brief storage for images, scenes, and photos.
Which of the following is true about sensory memory?
it usually holds information in its original sensory form for a very brief period of time
Freud believed that dreams had two levels of meaning, the _____ content, which is the content that appears on the surface, and the ____ content, which is hidden and only represented symbolically
manifest; latent
Information can make its way into consciousness through the unattended ear if it is:
meaningful
Explicit memory refers to:
memories that can be deliberately accessed or declared.
explicit memory
memory of facts and experiences that one can consciously know and "declare"
Pruning
old, unused connections die odd
serial position effect
our tendency to recall best the last and first items in a list
four working memory systems
phonological loop (stores sound information or what we hear) visa-spatial sketchpad (stores visual and space information or what we see and location of those objects in space) central executive (attention, controls information to and from the other areas of. working memory)
What is object permanence?
something is there even though you can't see. Like peekaboo
False memories are an example of:
suggestibility
____ occurs when memories are implanted in our minds based on leading questions, comments, or suggestions from someone else or some other source.
suggestibility
Cell phone vs. drinking and driving experiment
the cell phone can be more dangerous and distracting. It takes longer to brake when using a cell phone even if it is hands free.
What is the theory of mind?
you can not see things from another's POV. Example: naught Ann & Sally's toy. Preoperational kids do not have the theory of mind.
Schema
a concept or framework that organizes and interprets information
absentmindedness
a lapse in attention that results in memory failure
temperament
a person's characteristic emotional reactivity and intensity
Hypnosis
a social interaction in which one person suggests to another that certain perceptions, feelings, thoughts, or behaviors will spontaneously occur
cocktail party effect
ability to attend to only one voice among many
AIM
activation input, and mode?
Which of the following can be best described as a condition that results from habitual use of physical and psychological dependence on a substance?
addictions
anterograde amnesia
an inability to form new memories
retrograde amnesia
an inability to retrieve information from one's past
Since Wanda's brain operation she has been unable to store any new memories to recall them an hour or more later. However, she still recalls everything that happened before her operation. What kind of memory loss does she have?
anterograde amnesia
A teratogen is:
any substance that disrupts normal prenatal development
With each progressive cycle, the REM periods ____
are longer
Incorporating new information into existing theories is to _____ as modifying existing theories in light of new information is to _______
assimilation; accomodation
In human development ______ refers to the strong emotional connection that develops early in life to keep infants close to their caregivers
attachment
What is an example of conscious processing?
attending the lecture
Which of the following can be considered a key element of consciousness?
attention
An impaired theory of mind is most closely associated with
autism spectrum disorder
What are the standards of consciousness?
awareness and wakefulness
Harry harlow's monkey experiment showed that ______ is as essential a function of nursing in humans as is nutrition
body contact
The key event that distinguished the embryonic stage from the third stage, the fetal stage, is the formation of the _____
bone cells
key event that distinguishes between 2 and 3 of prenatal
bone.....?
The string of digits 17749991941 is difficult for most people to remember, but breaking them up into 177, 999, 1941 in a process called ______ makes it easier.
chunking
visual cliff experiment
created by E.J. Gibson, used to determine when infants can perceive depth is not about fear of heights, they just don't want to fall. The babies are crawling in class and it's a jump or no jump.
Knowledge that one has gained from experience and learning, education, and practice is called _____ intelligence
crystalized
What intelligence increases as we age?
crystallized intelligence. Everything else declines as we age.
Sleep deprivation has been shown to _____
diminish immunity to disease
What does AIM theory argue?
dreams are devoid of meaning and a result of random brain activity
The cell phone vs alcohol research presented in the lecture showed that
driving while using a cell phone can be more dangerous than driving after drinking
According to the model of temperament the ______ child is predictable in daily functions, is happy most of the time, and is adaptable
easy
Of the following, _____ is the first processing stage in the long-term memory formation.
encoding
four steps to forming memory?
encoding consolidation storage retrieval
inattentional blindness
failing to see visible objects when our attention is directed elsewhere
Research on forgetting began in the 1880's with Herman Ebbinghaus, who found that recall shows a steady decline over time. This decline is now termed as Ebbinghaus's:
forgetting curve
Tiffany field and her colleagues conducted an experiment to determine whether regular touch might help premature infants. During the experiment she found that the babies who received touch therapy _______ than those who did not
gained significantly more weight
Three stages of prenatal development
germinal, embryonic, fetal
Which of the following is true regarding the alcohol consumption of the mother during pregnancy?
here is no known safe level of alcohol consumption during pregnancy
Abdul looks around in his house for his wallet but cannot find it. He realizes that the last time he saw his wallet was at the grocery store. He looks in the freezer and finds his wallet next to the ice cream he bought at the store. Abdul's forgetfulness most likely occurred because:
his attention was divided
What does the neuroscientific research about hypnosis tell us?
hypnosis works, it can be easy for people who have active imaginations to be hypnotized, and it only works to make you do something you are already wanting to do.
________ memory is a brief visual record left on the retina of the eye?
iconic
two types of sensory memory
iconic (visual) and echoic (auditory)
Key event that distinguishes between stage 1 and 2
implantation to the uterine wall
Aaliyah remembers how to drive a car with a manual transmission, but when asked how she does it, she just says, "I don't know? It's automatic". This is an example of her:
implicit memory
In young and amnesic patients
implicit memory can be left unharmed for amnesic patients
In the research shown in the memory lecture, amnesic patients generally perform _____ as good as healthy adults.
implicit memory tests
Some animals especially bird follow and imitate the first large creature they see immediately after birth this is called ______
imprinting
preoperational stage (theory of mind)
in Piaget's theory, the stage (from about 2 to 6 or 7 years of age) during which a child learns to use language but does not yet comprehend the mental operations of concrete logic
sensorimotor stage (object permanence)
in Piaget's theory, the stage (from birth to about 2 years of age) during which infants know the world mostly in terms of their sensory impressions and motor activities
formal operational stage (conservation)
in Piaget's theory, the stage of cognitive development (normally beginning about age 12) during which people begin to think logically about abstract concepts
If an infant shows a secure attachment in the strange situation, according to erik erikson, what if anything can we predict about later behavior?
in adulthood, this person is likely to form good intimate relationships
Which of the following refers to a phenomenon by which one fails to notice unexpected objects in his or her surroundings?
in-attentional blindness
One well-established effect of hypnosis is to _____
inhibit pain
Compared with young adults, older adults are likely to _____
wake up more often during sleep
short-term memory
working memory
cellular damage
Injury on the cellular level caused by sufficient exposure to ionizing radiation at the molecular level
NREM sleep
Quiet, typically dreamless sleep in which rapid eye movements are absent; divided into four stages; also called quiet sleep.
REM sleep
Rapid eye movement sleep, a recurring sleep stage during which vivid dreams commonly occur. Also known as paradoxical sleep, because the muscles are relaxed (except for minor twitches) but other body systems are active.
Neural Growth
When neuron cells increase in size and complexity.
When asked where the sun goes at night, 4-year-old Kiet explains to his dad that it goes to sleep. Later that day, kiet gets upset because he believes his sister's glass contains more juice than his glass. Both glasses actually contain the same amount but he is confused because of the tall and thin shape of his sister's glass. From these instances, we can say that kiet is in the _____ stage of Piaget's cognitive development
preoperational
The main explanation for the _______ effect is that the items at the beginning of a list are quickly rehearsed and transferred to long-term memory storage?
primacy
With learning and experience certain synaptic connections become stronger, whereas those that do not receive stimulation from the environment die off. This process is known as ______
pruning
What does REM stand for?
rapid eye movement
Which of the following is the last process in Alan Baddeley's model of the working memory?
rehearsing the information
Improve LTM by
repeat things, use mnemonics, and use chunking
Which of the following factors contributes most positively to the development of secure attachment between human infants and their mothers
responsive parenting
implicit memory
retention independent of conscious recollection
One's inability to remember the name of a person only minutes after meeting her, even if one repeats her name immediately after hearing it, is a common _____ problem.
retrieval
Keith first studied for his sociology exam and then for his psychology exam in the same evening. When it was time for him to take his sociology exam, all he could remember was psychology material. Keith's forgetting is an example of:
retroactive interference
Nine-month old terrell is screaming and crying because his mother has dropped him off at the daycare. He displays this distress each time she leaves him. Terrell is likely experiencing ______
separation anxiety
What part of memory stores limited information long enough to remember a phone number before one dials it?
short-term memory
Dichotic listening task
shows selective attention. With headphones on they ignore what is going on in the unattended ear and only pay attention to what is coming out of one ear.
Nina is attending a get-together where she has to struggle to listen to a conversation with her colleague due to a lot of background noise. However, her ears prick up as soon as she hears her name being mentioned by someone in another part of the room and, consequently, she loses the thread of conversation with her colleague. Which of the following terms best describes the experience Nina has?
the cocktail party effect
Which of the following tests, upon research, yielded classic scientific selective attention?
the dichotic listening test
retroactive interference
the disruptive effect of new learning on the recall of old information
proactive interference
the disruptive effect of prior learning on the recall of new information
motor development
the emergence of the ability to execute physical action
cognitive development
the emergence of the ability to think and understand
memory
the persistence of learning over time through the storage and retrieval of information
long-term memory
the relatively permanent and limitless storehouse of the memory system. Includes knowledge, skills, and experiences. (implicit and explicit)
From the list that Jill made for a shopping trip to the grocery store, she could recall only the items in the beginning and in the end of a list. This is called:
the serial position effect
Which of the following hold true regarding sleep?
the sleeping state can be immediately reversed
suggestibility
the tendency to incorporate misleading information from external sources into personal recollections (false memory)
What is conservation theory?
the thing with the different size cups with the same amount of liquid in it.
Psychologists created the false-belief task to determine when children develop ________
theory of mind
What is the competent newborn?
they like stimuli that look like faces. Newborn like faces more than upside down faces.
sensory development
typically precedes intellectual and motor development
In which state will a person be wakful but not very aware?
vegetative