Chapter 7 Flashcards

1
Q

Mental Imagery

A

the mental representation of stimuli when those stimuli are not physically present

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2
Q

Visual Imagery

A

the mental representation of visual stimuli

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3
Q

Auditory Imagery

A

the mental representation of auditory stimuli

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4
Q

Perception

A

uses previous knowledge to gather and interpret the stimuli registered by the senses
-requires both bottom-up and top-down processing

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5
Q

Imagery debate

A

do our mental images resemble perception (using an analog code), or do they resemble language (using a propositional code)?

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6
Q

Analog code

A

a representation that closely resembles a physical object

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7
Q

Propositional code

A

an abstract, language-like representation; storage is neither visual nor spatial, and it does not physically resemble the original stimulus

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8
Q

Experimenter expectancy

A

the researchers biases and expectations influence the outcomes of the experiment

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9
Q

Demand characteristics

A

all the cues that might convey the experimenter’s hypothesis to the participant

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10
Q

Pitch

A

a characteristic of a sound stimulus that can be arranged on a scale from low to high

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11
Q

Timbre

A

describes the sound quality of a tone

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12
Q

Cognitive map

A

a mental representation of geographic information, including the environment that surrounds us

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13
Q

Spatial cognition

A

primarily refers to three cognitive activities: 1) our thoughts about cognitive maps, 2) how we remember the world we navigate, and 3) how we keep track of objects in a spatial array

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14
Q

Heuristic

A

a general problem-solving strategy that usually produces a correct solution… but not always

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15
Q

Border Bias

A

people estimate that the distance between two specific locations is larger if they are on different sides of that geometric border, compared to two locations on the same side of that border

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16
Q

Landmark effect

A

the general tendency to provide shorter estimates when travelling to a landmark– an important geographical location – rather than a non-landmark

17
Q

90-degree-angle heuristic

A

when people represent angles in a mental map as being closer to 90-degrees than they actually are

18
Q

Symmetry heuristic

A

people tend to remember figures as being more symmetrical and regular than they truly are

19
Q

Rotation heuristic

A

We remember a slightly tilted geographic structure as being either more vertical or more horizontal that it really is

20
Q

Alignment heuristic

A

We remember a series of geographic structures as being arranged in a straighter line than they really are

21
Q

The Spatial Framework Model

A

emphasizes that the above-below spatial dimension is especially important in our thinking, the front-back dimension is moderately important, and the right-left dimension is least important

22
Q

The Situated Cognition Approach

A

we make use of helpful information in the immediate environment or situation