Test One & Two Cog Psych
How long can auditory sensory memory last?
10 seconds
What is the average memory span
7/8
What is a synapse
A synapse is the almost contact area between a dendrite and an axon. If the synapse releases neurotransmitters it is excitatory and if it blocks them its called inhibitory.
level of activation determines probability and speed with which retreival can be accomplished
ACT theory
Nick speaks in short, ungrammatical sentences. He might have _____ aphasia.
Broca's
Differentiate between Broca's aphasia and Wernicke's aphasia.
Broca's aphasia is when someone can't form a grammatical sentence, whereas Wernicke's aphasia is when someone can form a grammatically correct sentence but have issues with meaning and comprehension. Broca's area is located in the frontal lobe whereas Wenicke's area is in the upper temporal lobe.
What measures mismatch negativity?
ERP measure
_____ emphasizes the contribution of motor action and how it connects us to the environment.
Embodied cognition
In the hippocampus, during the McDermont paragdim, what was the response of true and false words/
Equal
The _____ responds preferentially to faces.
FFA
what is modus ponens
Given A is true, infer B is true.
What is modus tollens
Given B is false, infer a is false.
In a visual array, subjects must identify the location of the target letter O. This should be EASIEST when the distracters are:
I's and X's.
Describe modus ponens.
If A then B. A is true. Thus, B is also true.
What is state-dependent learning?
If people learn something when they are in a particular state of mind, they are likely to remember it best when they are in the same condition
What is retrograde amnesia?
Inability to remember events that occurred before the incident
Differentiate between nativism and empiricism.
Nativism vs empiricism follows the nature vs nurture themes that tend to pop up a lot in psychology. Nativism is the belief that children come into the world with innate knowledge (nature) whereas empiricism is the belief that knowledge comes from experience (nurture).
Ben is invited to a picnic at one of his favorite parks. What part of his brain is activated as he imagines the location of the upcoming picnic?
PPA
The strong tendency for words to command processing is known as the:
Stroop
In O'Craven, Downing, and Kanwisher's (1999) study, participants viewed a series of pictures consisting of faces superimposed on houses. Which statement BEST summarizes the results of the study?
The active region varied, depending on whether the participant attended to faces or houses.
a valid reasoning for the atmosphere hypothesis
This phrase demonstrates what: some As are Bs, all Bs are Cs, so some As are Cs
T/F is is difficult to maintain multiple associations for an item
True
Who established the first psychology laboratory?
Wundt
As a memory is practiced, it is strengthened according to a what?
a power function
insight problem
a problem in which individuals are not aware that they are close to a solution
What is tactical learning
a process by which people learn specific procedures for solving specific problems (learning by doing)
Describe a categorical syllogism
a statement containing two premises, a conclusion, and a quantifier
what derives long term potentiation in the hippocampus?
activation in the prefrontal region
Forgetting may also produced by...
active suppression of memories
what are invalid rules of inference
affirmation of consequent or denial of antecedent
what are universal statements
all and no
what are logical quanitifiers
all or some
give an example of a syllogism
all poodles are pets. all pets have names. therefore, all poodles have names.
Damage to the hippocampal region produces what
amnesia
according to spreading activation, participants were what on realted words?
faster
what is a phonological store?
an inner ear
Midazolam produces what kind of amnesia
anterograde
Cassie cannot recognize simple shapes nor copy drawings. She might have:
apperceptive agnosia
When visual stimuli are presented off the foveal fixation point, subjects:
are faster shifting attention to an expected point than to an unexpected point.
When subjects are asked to name the color of ink in which a word is printed and the word itself is the name of a different color, subjects typically:
are much slower than when naming the color for a word of the same color.
what is a syllogism
arguments consisting of two premises and a conclusion
how does the strength of a memory decay?
as a power function of the period of time over which it is retained
According to _____, patterns are recognized by the combination of their elemental features.
feature analysis
Components of the neuron include the:
axon, dendrite, soma
According to _____, psychologists should NOT analyze the working of the mind.
behaviorists
what does backup avoidance do?
biases the problem solver against any operator that undoes the effect of one or more previous operators
What are set effects?
biasing of a solution to a problem as a result of past experience
The field cognitive neuroscience focuses on how cognition is realized in the:
brain
what part of the brain does the articulatory process activate?
broca's area
what area fires during a delay?
brodmann's area
How is the Tower of Hanoi problem solved?
by adopting a means-ends strategy in which subgoals are created
Although an ostrich cannot fly, we still recognize it as a bird. This illustrates the fact that schemas:
can accommodate exceptions to general rules.
If you lesion the left prefrontal cortex what happens?
cannot remember visual field in the right
What was Wolfgang Kohler's experiment?
chimpanzees were tasked to get food and had to put one pole inside the other to make it long enough
What are the three phases of skill acquisition?
cognitive, associative, autonomous
Cones are to _____ as rods are to _____.
color vision; night vision
What are intelligent tutoring systems and their benefits?
computer systems that combine cognitive models and AI techniques, it carefully monitors individual responses
what are intelligent tutoring systems
computer systems that interact with students while they are learning and solving problems
The fovea is a spot in the retina where:
cones are most densely packed, and fine detail vision occurs
what is the central executive?
controls how the slave systems are used
Patients with right-hemisphere parietal lesion were asked to copy a picture. They:
could copy specific components of the picture, but not the spatial configuration
wickelgren interpreted what as a measure of memory strength
d'
If Broca's area is damaged, what might result?
deficiets of short term memory
Talent often leads to but does not guarantee what
deliberate practice
a great deal of what is needed to develop expertise in any field ?
deliberate practice
What is the theory that states rehersal improves memory only if the material is rehersed in a deep way that involves assigning meaning to the material ?
depth of processing theory
Increasing practice has what kinds of returns?
diminishing
whats the difference between practice and retention functions
diminishing improvement with practice // diminishing loss with delay
How can problem solving operators be acquired?
discovery, direct expression, or example
An auditory sensory store is also called what?
echoic memory
With regard to navigation, cognitive psychologists differentiate between representing space as we see it (_____ representation) and representing space free of any particular viewpoint (_____ representation).
egocentril; allocentric
According to _____, all knowledge comes from experience
empiricism
What does the prefrontal cortex regulate?
encoding of new memories and retrieval of old memories
A mental experience that does NOT have any functional role in information processing is referred to as a(n):
epiphenomenon
Why isn't eyewitness testimony always accurate?
eyewitnesses confuse actual events with events from other sources
_____ relies on the fact that there is more oxygenated hemoglobin in regions of greater neural activity.
fMRI
What is semantic memory?
facts and general knowledge
A manager at a car dealership, is likely to show high activity in his _____ when he makes judgments about cars.
fusiform gyrus
study that involve what lead to better memory from text material
generating questions and answers
What determins the level of achievement
genetics and practice
What is affirmation of consequent
given b is true, a is true
What are the three problem solving features
goal directedness, subgoal decomposition, operator application
Kapur's PET scan showed what in relation to depth of processing?
greater activation in left prefrontal the deeper the processing
When Shepard compared subjects' memory for sentences versus memory for pictures, he found that the subjects:
had a higher rate of errors in the sentence condition than in the picture condition.
Through extensive practice, we can develop what that has supported the evolution human civilization
high levels of expertise in novel domains
What part of the brain is important for the storage of new memories?
hippocampus
Where does long term potentiation occur
hippocampus and cortical areas
intelligent tutoring systems are as effective as
human tutors
A visual sensory store is also called what?
iconic memory
a hypothesis requires
identifying what features are relevant and how they are related
What was the Wason Selection Task?
if a card has a vowel on one side, then it has an even number on the other side
what is denial of antecedent
if a is false then b is false
what is a conditional description
if then
the incorrect reasoning in the wason teask can be explained how
if we presume that participants sselct cards that will be informative under a probablistic model
When Treisman and Schmidt presented combination stimuli outside the focus of attention, they observed a phenomenon called:
illusory conjunction
Procedural learning is a type of what and where is it supported
implicit learning / basal ganglia
What is anterograde amnesia?
inability to form new memories
Neda was so immersed in her painting that she did not notice her sister coming into her room and opening her closet, putting items in it, and then sitting in a corner to read a book. What phenomenon did Neda experience?
inattentional blindness
activation does what and recognition does what
increase / decrease
What happens to ERP when there is different forms in sound?
increases
What is episodic memory?
information about events we have personally experienced
Some evidence for object-based attention involves the phenomenon of:
inhibition of return
what is an articulatory process?
inner voice
what is teh permission schema
interpreting a conditional statement as the antecedent specifying the situations in which the consequent is permitted
affirms consequent and denies antecendent, what inference have they made?
invalid
inductive reasoning
is outside the dataset
mental model theory
it is not natural for people to judge the logical validity of a syllogism
Set effects result when....
knowledge relevant to a particular type of problem solution is strengthened.
chronic alcoholism can result in what...
korsakoff syndrome
in deliberate practice, people are motivated to do what and not what
learn not just preform
What were the implications of the chimp study of Kohler?
learned behaviors are adaptive
The _____ prefrontal region is involved in processing verbal information.
left
what part of the brain is active during reasoning about problems with meaningful content.
left ventral prefrontal and parietal temporal
How much of your brain do you use when you're more proficient at the same task?
less of the brain
With regards to speech perception, the McGurk effect illustrates:
listeners merge perception of an acoustic stimulus with the context cues provided by the lips.
intelligent tutoring systems are a form of
mastery learning
Material learned inside the labratory can interfere with....
material learned outside the labratory
decay theory
memories decay in strength with time
flashbulb memory
memory for events so important that they seen to burn themselves permanently into our minds
number of elements that one can immediately repeat back in the correct order after hearing a list
memory span
Neda is imagining how her sculpture will look from different perspectives. Neda is engaging in:
mental rotation
what are source monitoring errors
misidentifying the source of a memory
people show high levels of logical reasoning with
modus ponens
what are valid rules of inference
modus ponens and tollens
In the wason task, the majority of participants apply the rule of
modus tollens or not turning over the 7
is the prefrontal cortex larger in a monkey or rat?
monkey
Describe deliberate practice and how it contributes to neural growth
more growth, highly motivated practice with self monitoring
according to the atomsphere hypothersis, when premises are mixed, people tend to prefer what type of conclusion
negative
what is non existent in skill aquisition?
negative transfer
memory loss is what kind of accelerated
negatively
What is the basis for memory?
neural plasticity or connections among neurons
Cells of the nervous system communicate by releasing chemicals called:
neurotransmitters
why can memories not be kept in STM indefinitely?
new information pushes out old information
tactical learning involves learning...and strategic learning involves...
new pieces of skill & putting the pieces together
means end analysis describes that creation of
new subgoals to enable operators to apply
are all memories truly forgotten?
no
Learning related material does what to the retrieval of a target memory.
not interfere
In shepard's experiemnt, what is a lag?
number of intervening items
The primary visual areas are contained in the _____ lobe.
occipital
Learning additional association to an item causes...
old ones to be forgotten
Scripts are schemas that encode:
our knowledge of stereotypical sequences of actions.
Spatial processing occurs in the _____ lobe.
parietal
Unilateral visual neglect is due to a lesion in this lobe of the brain.
parietal
what part of the brain does the phonological store activate?
parietal temporal
long-term working memory
part of working memory formed by quickly accessed long term memory
When the tone cue was presented immediately after the display was turned off
partial report procedure
What is functional fixedness?
people are fixed on representing an object according to its conventional function
What are incubation effects
people are unconsciously trying to solve a problem while they are away from it
mental model theory is
people evaluate a syllogism by creating a picture in their head
errors in evaluating a syllogism can be explained by what
people failing to consider possible mental models of syllogisms
What are set effects?
people's experiences can bias them to prefer certain operators when solving a problem
The correct order of visual information processing is:
photoreceptor cells -> bipolar cells -> ganglion cells -> optic nerve
What does the right hemisphere focus on?
pictoral material
what part of the brain is active during reasoning about problems withOUT meaningful content.
posterior parietal
Participant's performance improved with practice according to what function type
power function
Human memory depends heavily on what structures of the brain for the creation & retrieval of memories? and what part for permanent storage?
prefrontal / temporal
What plays a critical role in maintaining a goal strucutre??
prefrontal cortex
New explicit memories are formed where
prefrontal cortex then transfered
in terms of the fan effect, what area of the brain is activated during the verification of facts?
prefrontal cortex- higher response in greater fan condition
where does auditory sensory memory occur?
primary auditory cortex
where does visual sensory memory occur?
primary visual cortex
what is strategic learning
process by which people learn to organize their problem solving
Our tendency to perceive elements close together as a group is the Gestalt principle of:
proximity
type one processes are what and what are type twto processes
rapid/automatic & slow/deliberate
The reduction in activation in the parietal region after practice suggests what
representational demand decreases after practice
power law of forgetting
retention functions are generally power functions i.e. both are negatively accelerated
interference theory
retention is strongly impacted by interfering material
what is a dropout learning procedure
retesting the items answered incorrectly until all the answers are correct
As people become more practiced at a task they switch from computation to what
retrieval
The _____ prefrontal region is involved in processing visual information.
right
A path that indicates specific places but contains no spatial information is called a _____ map.
route
What are the parts of declarative memory?
semantic and episodic
What are the steps in the model of memory?
sensory input -> attended info goes into short term -> rehersed goes into long term
What happened when the post exposure field was bright/high visual input?
sensory store was completely gone after 1 second
Patients with hippocampal damage...
show same prefrontal activation but fail to store memories
there is often failure to transfer skills to what and virtually no transfer to what
similar domain & new domain
The gestalt principle of _____ accounts for objects that look alike grouped together
similarity
what is the theory of identical elements
specific habits and associations provide a person with a variety of narrow responses to a specific stimuli
currently attended items make associated memories more avaliable
spreading activation
To convert a 2-D retinal image to a 3-D neural representation, the visual system uses cues such as
stereopsis, texture gradient, and motion parallax
as people become more expert, they develop a better ability to....
store problem information in long term memory and to retrieve it
each time a memory is recalled it increases in what
strength
In Mandler and Johnson's study using pictures of scenes (such as classroom scenes), the token distracter can be regarded as a difference in _____, while the type distracter can be regarded as a difference in _____.
style; meaning
In Wanner's study of warned subjects versus unwarned subjects, the:
subjects had similar recall for meaning, whether they had been warned or not.
A map that acts like a spatial image of the environment is referred to as a _____ map.
survey
Chess experts' pattern learning and better memory for board positions are part of what kind of learning ?
tactical
Discuss tactical learning and strategic learning and describe the differences.
tactical is hands on and strategic is more mental steps
stimulation of what reports of memories that patients were unable to report in normal recal
temporal lobe
What is false memory syndrome?
the creation of inaccurate or false memories through the suggestion of others, often while the person is under hypnosis
What study is associated with effects of encoding context?
the divers study
What did the spacing effect study determine?
the fewer number of intervening items the better the performance until the day after
based on the dropout learning procedure,
the groups who studied at shorter intervals had done better on earlier tests but worse on long term
Difference reduction refers to what
the human tendancy to select the operator that most reduces the difference between the current state and goal
what is the fan effect?
the increase in reaction time related to an increase in the number of memory structures associated with a concept
Mental Images are
the mind's representation of external scenes or objects that makes it seem as though one is seeing the object being envisioned
What is the encoding specificity principle?
the probability of recalling an item at test depends on the similarity of context during encoding at test to the context during the encoding at sstudy
What is proceduralization?
the process of converting the deliberate use of declarative knowledge into pattern driven application of procedural knowledge
The more facts associated with a concept....
the slower the retrieval of any one of those facts
The major decrease in activation of the prefrontal region indicates what
the task instructions are no longer being retrieved rather applied directly
What is functional fixedness
the tendency to perceive an item only in terms of its most common use
People show better memory if...
their internal & external states are the same at the time of the study as the test
When people see a picture, they tend to remember best aspects that _____.
they consider meaningful
What happens when participants elaborate on material while studying it?
they recall more of what they studied but also inferences they did not study but made themselves
Even if amnesic patients cannot consciously recall an event,
they show in implicit ways they still have memories of it
elaborative processing
thinking of information that relates to and expands on the information that needs to be remembered
When asked to estimate the size of two animals, subjects generally:
took longer to estimate size when the difference was small.
For the Wason task how are the results?
training in logic does not increase accuracy
T/F intelligent tutoring systems are more effective than classroom instruction and online instruction
true
which proccess makes heavy demands on working memory
type 2
what determeines the amount of material remembered
type of processing
what is an example of implicit memory?
typing but cant name the keys
As people become proficient at a task, they tend to
use less of their brain
what are categorical syllogisms
use quantifiers like some, all, no, some not
What form of reasoning is modus ponens?
valid reasoning
What does the left hemisphere focus on?
verbal material
a memory system that can briefly store visual information
visual sensory store
What are the components to the salve system?
visuospatial sketchpad / phonological loop
what cards should be turned over in the wason selection task
vowel and odd number
What is implicit memory?
what our actions imply we remember in the absence of conscious memory
What will people judge rather than try to retrieve the facts.
what plausibly may be true
People use what to infer what else they might have studied.
what they can remember
What is explicit memory?
what we consciously recall
What did Sperling's test with the letters determine?
when cued participants can recall more letters of just a line versus the whole display
when does memory for material improve
when it is processed with more meaningful elaborations
What is insight problem
when people are not aware that they are close to a solution
What did the wason task determine
when presented with abstract material, people have difficulty in recognizing the importance of exploring whether the consequent is false
Mirror neurons in a monkey become active:
when the monkey performs an action or sees another perform an action.
when is there a transfer of skill
when the skill has the same abstract knowledge elements
When participants had to recall the whole display
whole report procedure
deductive reasoning is
within the data set
is the wason selection task true for experts
yes