chapter 9 Flashcards

1
Q

_______ is a concept more than 100 years old and refers to the information that decays in a short time (minutes to seconds) if you do not use it.

A

short term memory

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2
Q

the phrase “short term memory” has largely been replaced in cognitive psychology with the term “___________”

A

“working memory”

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3
Q

__________ works with or uses information to address a particular question or situation

A

working memory

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4
Q

working memory typically lasts from __________

A

a few seconds to a couple minutes

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5
Q

t or f?

working memory is a single system

A

false

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6
Q

_________ is a system of repeating something over and over internally to remember it

A

phonological loop

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7
Q

_________ is a system of using visual perception to remember something

A

visuospatial sketchpad

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8
Q

working memory systems in most people seem capable of holding around ____ items of information at a time

A

seven

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9
Q

_______ refers to systems that are capable of encoding, storing, and retrieving information over periods of time, , anywhere from minutes to a lifetime

A

long term memory

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10
Q

_________ system’s capacity is much greater than that of the ________ systems

A

long term memory

working memory

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11
Q

long term memory systems are typically grouped into two subdivisions:

1) __________ memory
2) __________ memory

A

1) implicit memory

2) explicit memory

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12
Q

the first subdivision of long-term memory, __________ or nondeclarative memory, is a system that encodes information that does not lend itself to conscious recall or expression

A

implicit memory

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13
Q

unconscious motor memories, such as the movements required to operate a bicycle, are good examples of _______ memory

A

implicit memory

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14
Q

the second subdivision of long-term memory, _________ or declarative memory, is a system that encodes information that can be consciously recalled and expressed

A

explicit memory

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15
Q

memories of life episodes or facts, such as your first day of college or that a bicycle has two wheel, are good examples of ______ memory

A

explicit memory

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16
Q

implicit memory involves skills and learning that can occur

without _____________

A

without conscious awareness

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17
Q

__________ are memories for how to perform skills or habits, such as reading, typing, swimming, juggling, playing piano, or riding a bicycle.

A

procedural memories

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18
Q

__________ are acquired slowly, through reception and practice, and can endure long after the sessions of practice.

A

procedural memories

19
Q

studies in animals and humans suggest that the neural circuitry of the _______ is essential for forming procedural memories

A

striatum

20
Q

________ refers to unconscious long-term memory, in which past experiences influence or increase the response to a given sensory stimulus.

A

priming

21
Q

Pavlov’s dog experiment is used to demonstrate a form of implicit memory called __________

A

classical conditioning

22
Q

pavlov built on the observation that dogs normally respond to food (the _______ stimulus), by salivation ( the _______ response). Over time, dogs learned to associate the ringing of a bell or another signal ( the ________ stimulus) with the impending delivery of food. With repeated experiences, they began to salivate in response to the bell alone, making the salivation now a ______ response, even before the arrival of the food itself

A

food = unconditioned stimulus
salivation = unconditioned response
bell or signal = conditioned stimulus
salivation after bell = conditioned response

23
Q

_________ is a form of implicit memory that involves learning to gradually increase or decrease a certain behaviour in response to learned rewards or consequences

A

operant conditioning

24
Q

Learning of emotional responses for both classical and operant conditioning appears to depends on the neural circuitry of the _______.

A

amygdala

25
Q

Learning skeletal muscle responses (ex; blinking eyes at a puff of air to the face) relies on the ______ and other associated structures of the brainstem.

A

cerebellum

26
Q

_________ refer to long-term changes in reflex pathways in the nervous system

A

nonassociative learning

27
Q

habituation, when repeated exposure to the same stimulus cause a gradual decrease in the response, is a good example of __________.

A

nonassociative learning

28
Q

the opposite of habituation is ________, where the response to a given stimulus increases following exposure to an especially strong or noxious “sensitizing” stimulus

A

sensitization

29
Q

the effects of habituation and sensitization can be seen at _____ levels of the nervous system

(hint: lower, all, or higher levels?)

A

all

30
Q

______ memories are memories or facts that you are aware that you know.

A

explicit

31
Q

the two basic forms of explicit memory are ________ memory and ______ memory

A

episodic

semantic

32
Q

_________ are memories for past autobiographical events, such as birthdays, meetings, discoveries, and travels.

A

episodic

33
Q

______ memories can be consciously recalled and described, written in a journal, and used in a flexible way to guide behavior

A

episodic

34
Q

_________ often have a vivid , cinema-like quality to them.

A

episodic memories

35
Q

sequences of actions and occurrences are usually a key part of _________ memories.

A

episodic

36
Q

memory researchers sometimes distinguish between _____ and ______

A

familiarity and recollection

37
Q

________ involves a more vague sense of emotional content, without any accompanying context

A

familiarity

38
Q

a complete _____ involves a rich recreation of place, time, surroundings, actions, and events

A

recollection

39
Q

the __________ and in particular a region known as the ________ are key structures for the recollection and recreation of episodic memories.

A

medial temporal lobe

hippocampus

40
Q

____________ are memories for facts about the outside world

A

semantic memories

41
Q

_______ memories often involve information about the properties of things.

A

semantic

42
Q

since ________ are independent of any one particular kind of sensory input, they are useful for organizing the world into categories of semantically related stimuli

A

semantic properties

43
Q

what makes semantic memories tricky is that they can sometimes _________________

A

masquerade as an episodic memory