6.6-6.8 Flashcards

1
Q

these are stimuli for remembering

A

Retrieval Cues

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2
Q

can occur where experience with information or concepts can improve later performance.

A

Priming

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3
Q

The connection between surroundings and remembered information

A

Encoding specificity

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4
Q

The tendency for a memory to be enhanced if the retrieval conditions are alike to the conditions when the information was encoded

A

Encoding specificity

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5
Q

a form of encoding specificity where memories formed during a particular physiological or psychological state will be easier to remember while in a similar state

A

State-Dependent Learning

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6
Q

memories are retrieved with few or no external cues, such as filling in the blanks on an application form.

A

Recall

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7
Q

when recall has failed temporarily

A

Retrieval Failure

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8
Q

Tip of the tongue (TOT) phenomenon
may be a function of an area of the brain called the

A

fusiform gyrus

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9
Q

information at the beginning and the end of a list tends to be remembered more easily and accurately.

A

Serial position effect

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10
Q

Words at the very beginning of the list tend to be remembered better than those in the middle of the list.

A

Primacy effect

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11
Q

increase in recall due to the fact that the last word or two was just heard and is still in short-term memory for easy retrieval.

A

Recency effect

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12
Q

long-term memory is increased when students practice retrieving the information to be learned

A

Testing effect

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13
Q

involves looking at or hearing information and matching it to what is already in memory.

A

Recognition

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14
Q

usually much easier than recall because there is a cue
However, it is not foolproof.

A

Recognition

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15
Q

When a person thinks that he has recognized (or even recalled) something but in fact does not have that something or someone in memory.

A

False positive

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16
Q

falsely accused because of false positives of eyewitnesses

A

Father Bernard Pagano

17
Q

She showed in her study that what people see and hear about an event after the fact can easily affect the accuracy of their memories of that event.

A

Elizabeth Loftus and Eyewitnesses

18
Q

When long-term memories seem to enter permanent storage with little or no effort at all

A

Automatic encoding

19
Q

A special kind of automatic encoding because an unexpected event or episode in a person’s life is tied with strong emotional associations

A

Flashbulb memories

20
Q

The reason may be the emotions felt at the time of the event which stimulate the release of hormones that enhance the formation of long-term memories

A

Flashbulb memories