Unit 7: Accuracy and Inaccuracy in Memory and Cognition
Cognitive Biases
Errors in memory or judgment that are caused by the inappropriate use of cognitive processes
Misinformation Effect
Errors in memory that occur when new information influences existing memories.
Cognitive Accessibility
People's first person perspective leads them to overestimate the degree to which they played a role in an event or project
We tend to attend to and remember things that are highly ___, meaning that they attract our attention
Salient
Source Monitoring
The ability to accurately identify the source of a memory
Overconfidence
The tendency for people to be too certain about their ability to accurately remember events and to make judgments.
Availability Heuristic
The tendency to make judgments of the frequency or likelihood that an event occurs on the basis of the ease with which it can be retrieved from memory
Counterfactual Thinking
The tendency to think about and experience events according to "what might have been"
Confirmation Bias
The tendency to verify and confirm our existing memories rather than to challenge and disconfirm them
Psi-Gamma
Those phenomena that involve anomalous information transfer, like ESP, clairvoyance, and remote viewing
Psi-Kappa
Those phenomena that involve anomalous transfer of matter
Flashbulb Memory
A vivid and emotional memory of an unusual event that people believe they remember very well
Sleeper Effect
An attitude change that occurs over time when we forget the source of information
Heuristics
Information-processing strategies that are useful in many cases but may lead to errors when misapplied.
Schemata (plural of schema)
Mental representations of the world that are formed and adjusted using the processes of assimilation and accommodation as a person experiences life
Algorithms
Recipe-style information-processing strategies that guarantee a correct answer at all times.
Two of the Most Frequently Applied (and Misapplied) Heuristics: the ___ heuristic and the ___ heuristic
Representativeness and Availability
Functional Fixedness
When people's schemas prevent them from using an object in new and nontraditional ways.
Representativeness Heuristic
When we base our judgments on information that seems to represent, or match, what we expect will happen, while ignoring other potentially more relevant statistical information