Memory
... First study to describe scanning the human genetic blueprint to identify cognitive differences between humans. “We can now use this new understanding to develop drugs that will improve memory function." "Functional brain imaging techniques showed individuals w/ a version of the gene related to poore ...
... First study to describe scanning the human genetic blueprint to identify cognitive differences between humans. “We can now use this new understanding to develop drugs that will improve memory function." "Functional brain imaging techniques showed individuals w/ a version of the gene related to poore ...
Forgetting Curve
... • Repression is an unconscious process through which an individual blocks a memory of an event or experience from entering conscious awareness. • This explanation is based on the observations of Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud (18561939) that individuals sometimes unconsciously prevent a memory ...
... • Repression is an unconscious process through which an individual blocks a memory of an event or experience from entering conscious awareness. • This explanation is based on the observations of Austrian psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud (18561939) that individuals sometimes unconsciously prevent a memory ...
Short term memory
... Memory function helps fixing of perceived information, keeping it in verbal form or as traces of percept stimuli and recognizing of this information in proper time. Genetic memory keeps information about body structure and forms of its behavior. Biological memory is presented in both philogenetic an ...
... Memory function helps fixing of perceived information, keeping it in verbal form or as traces of percept stimuli and recognizing of this information in proper time. Genetic memory keeps information about body structure and forms of its behavior. Biological memory is presented in both philogenetic an ...
Long-Term Memory
... Measure of memory in which the person has only to identify items previously learned as on a multiple-choice test Relearning memory measure that assesses the amount of time saved when learning material a second time ...
... Measure of memory in which the person has only to identify items previously learned as on a multiple-choice test Relearning memory measure that assesses the amount of time saved when learning material a second time ...
Module 6.1 Remembering Lecture Outline
... events and experiences, not of replaying them exactly as they occurred 1. Racial biases in memory schemas—biases about people can occur based on memory organization B. People are generally better able to recall information that is consistent with their existing schema 1. A memory schema—an organized ...
... events and experiences, not of replaying them exactly as they occurred 1. Racial biases in memory schemas—biases about people can occur based on memory organization B. People are generally better able to recall information that is consistent with their existing schema 1. A memory schema—an organized ...
- LSBU Research Open
... control of the environment; it suffices to simply deduce which stimulus is chained to the response to explain its occurrence. The ‘cognitive revolution’, had its origins, in part, in the observation that certain kinds of phenomenon could not be explained in this way. Persons draw on mental resources ...
... control of the environment; it suffices to simply deduce which stimulus is chained to the response to explain its occurrence. The ‘cognitive revolution’, had its origins, in part, in the observation that certain kinds of phenomenon could not be explained in this way. Persons draw on mental resources ...
Glossary
... Dr. Freud is often referred to as the father of clinical psychology. His extensive theory of personality development (psychoanalytical theory) is the cornerstone for modern psychological thought, and consists of (1) the psychosexual stages of development, (2) the structural model of personality (id, ...
... Dr. Freud is often referred to as the father of clinical psychology. His extensive theory of personality development (psychoanalytical theory) is the cornerstone for modern psychological thought, and consists of (1) the psychosexual stages of development, (2) the structural model of personality (id, ...
alphabet of human thought
... WORLD (symbols must actually be connected to the things they refer to in the world, which is meaning but what is meaning then?) Descartes o Always looking for the truth o You can doubt the existence of your body, but can’t doubt the existence of your mind (body = from senses, mind = must exist becau ...
... WORLD (symbols must actually be connected to the things they refer to in the world, which is meaning but what is meaning then?) Descartes o Always looking for the truth o You can doubt the existence of your body, but can’t doubt the existence of your mind (body = from senses, mind = must exist becau ...
Memory
... • Mood congruence: Matching emotional mood as a cue at encoding and retrieval to improve memory ...
... • Mood congruence: Matching emotional mood as a cue at encoding and retrieval to improve memory ...
Ch05aaa
... few days later, (e) she retrieves the number from long-term memory to order pizza again. Darkened parts of the modal model indicate which processes are activated for each action that Rachel takes. ...
... few days later, (e) she retrieves the number from long-term memory to order pizza again. Darkened parts of the modal model indicate which processes are activated for each action that Rachel takes. ...
- Kennedy HS
... Compulsion The physical act resulting from an obsession. Typically a compulsive act is done in an attempt to alleviate the discomfort created by an obsession. Conditioned Response The response in a stimulus-response chain that is not naturally occurring, but rather has been learned through its pair ...
... Compulsion The physical act resulting from an obsession. Typically a compulsive act is done in an attempt to alleviate the discomfort created by an obsession. Conditioned Response The response in a stimulus-response chain that is not naturally occurring, but rather has been learned through its pair ...
AP Psychology Vocabulary
... Chemical Imbalance A generic term for the idea that chemical in the brain are either too scarce or too abundant resulting in a mental disorder such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. Classical Conditioning The behavioral technique of pairing a naturally occurring stimulus and response chain with ...
... Chemical Imbalance A generic term for the idea that chemical in the brain are either too scarce or too abundant resulting in a mental disorder such as schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. Classical Conditioning The behavioral technique of pairing a naturally occurring stimulus and response chain with ...