Are Action-based Lies easier to detect than Speech
... significantly higher than Speech confidence ratings, t (18) = 2.395, p = .028. These results are in line with Palacios et al., 2014 and Saito et al., 2014. The higher confidence for Action and the lower confidence for Speech may reflect a a more elaborative memory trace for Action than Speech. The L ...
... significantly higher than Speech confidence ratings, t (18) = 2.395, p = .028. These results are in line with Palacios et al., 2014 and Saito et al., 2014. The higher confidence for Action and the lower confidence for Speech may reflect a a more elaborative memory trace for Action than Speech. The L ...
International Encyclopedia of Rehabilitation - Cirrie
... Anterograde Amnesia Anterograde amnesia refers to a deficit in encoding new information subsequent to a given and specific event in time, for instance trauma due to an accident or the onset of brain damage. Consequently, new information cannot be or is partially retained by the individual, which lea ...
... Anterograde Amnesia Anterograde amnesia refers to a deficit in encoding new information subsequent to a given and specific event in time, for instance trauma due to an accident or the onset of brain damage. Consequently, new information cannot be or is partially retained by the individual, which lea ...
AP Psychology - School District of Clayton
... complete. Professor Jackson then asks each student about his or her professional goals. She rates the statement of each on a 7- point scale for strength of achievment motivation. When they arrive, the remaining students are taken to another room and given a series of difficult puzzles by Professor J ...
... complete. Professor Jackson then asks each student about his or her professional goals. She rates the statement of each on a 7- point scale for strength of achievment motivation. When they arrive, the remaining students are taken to another room and given a series of difficult puzzles by Professor J ...
Initiation of the arousal response
... effects are common. The following analysis is neither exhaustive nor altogether precise, since arcane technical details that would add discriminatory levels of information have been omitted. The brain systems or axes most discussed in this context are those regulating arousal, memory, emotion, moti ...
... effects are common. The following analysis is neither exhaustive nor altogether precise, since arcane technical details that would add discriminatory levels of information have been omitted. The brain systems or axes most discussed in this context are those regulating arousal, memory, emotion, moti ...
LiebermanSSSP2002REV - Sydney Symposium of Social
... The C-system. Sometimes our existing expectations in the X-system fail us. The failure can occur in one of two ways, but the result is the same in both cases: another mechanism besides the X-system is needed to guide behavior. Sometimes the task or stimulus is novel and consequently the X-system has ...
... The C-system. Sometimes our existing expectations in the X-system fail us. The failure can occur in one of two ways, but the result is the same in both cases: another mechanism besides the X-system is needed to guide behavior. Sometimes the task or stimulus is novel and consequently the X-system has ...
chapter03 - WordPress.com
... Depending on the nature of the processing task, different levels of processing occur that activate some aspects of memory rather than others. ...
... Depending on the nature of the processing task, different levels of processing occur that activate some aspects of memory rather than others. ...
Remembering or Forgetting: The Lifetime of Memories
... In our laboratory, we study the kind of memories that we can intentionally recall. In our everyday lives, we very often form this type of memory by a process called association. Learning by association was first studied by a Russian scientist named Ivan Pavlov. Pavlov played a clicking sound to hung ...
... In our laboratory, we study the kind of memories that we can intentionally recall. In our everyday lives, we very often form this type of memory by a process called association. Learning by association was first studied by a Russian scientist named Ivan Pavlov. Pavlov played a clicking sound to hung ...
Impact on Perception, Attention, and Memory
... that emotional targets (e.g., threatening faces, snakes, or spiders) pop out when embedded in an array of neutral distracters (e.g., friendly faces, flowers, or mushrooms) but the reverse is not true for neutral targets. It is proposed that an enhanced ability to detect a snake in a field of flowers ...
... that emotional targets (e.g., threatening faces, snakes, or spiders) pop out when embedded in an array of neutral distracters (e.g., friendly faces, flowers, or mushrooms) but the reverse is not true for neutral targets. It is proposed that an enhanced ability to detect a snake in a field of flowers ...
More is Better: The Effects of Multiple Repetitions on Implicit Memory
... In the Reder et al. (1998) experiments, the words were selected from the Medical Research Council psycholinguistic database (Coltheart, 1981). Half the word were selected to have high normative frequencies, and half were selected to have low frequencies. The mean normative Kucera and Francis (1967) ...
... In the Reder et al. (1998) experiments, the words were selected from the Medical Research Council psycholinguistic database (Coltheart, 1981). Half the word were selected to have high normative frequencies, and half were selected to have low frequencies. The mean normative Kucera and Francis (1967) ...
NROAbstract5
... (orange), PHX (gray), SNS (blue), KHI (yellow), and SKY (pink). Within each of the colored shapes is an arbitrary symbol representing each of the elements in the loop. To summarize the scenario: 1) the user’s mind (PSI/orange) has a thought to query some information; 2) that thought translates into ...
... (orange), PHX (gray), SNS (blue), KHI (yellow), and SKY (pink). Within each of the colored shapes is an arbitrary symbol representing each of the elements in the loop. To summarize the scenario: 1) the user’s mind (PSI/orange) has a thought to query some information; 2) that thought translates into ...
Different Strategies in Solving Series Completion Inductive
... and twice internal maintaining/updating a counter, and then the rule can be determined according to the counter. In this way, the procedural strategy incurs many more working memory demands than the retrieval strategy. Thus, the two strategies should differentially engage brain areas that are sensit ...
... and twice internal maintaining/updating a counter, and then the rule can be determined according to the counter. In this way, the procedural strategy incurs many more working memory demands than the retrieval strategy. Thus, the two strategies should differentially engage brain areas that are sensit ...
JBenedict_TCH301O_Week3_ASG02_memories_v01
... The soul does not die in part or in whole at least throughout the duration of life, but like the physical body remains constant throughout its term of existence. Unlike the individual components, the soul is not damaged by changes to the body, mind, or memory. The soul is a continuous container of e ...
... The soul does not die in part or in whole at least throughout the duration of life, but like the physical body remains constant throughout its term of existence. Unlike the individual components, the soul is not damaged by changes to the body, mind, or memory. The soul is a continuous container of e ...
Warren S. McCulloch: Why the Mind Is in the Head
... find it is only about two units per millisecond. Recent telephonic devices have sampled waves every thousandth of a second and passed on one pip if the wave was then of a given deviation from the mean, otherwise no pip. These are relayed to a smearing device and heard. It is better than 90 per cent ...
... find it is only about two units per millisecond. Recent telephonic devices have sampled waves every thousandth of a second and passed on one pip if the wave was then of a given deviation from the mean, otherwise no pip. These are relayed to a smearing device and heard. It is better than 90 per cent ...
Cortical Functions Reference
... Motor function is the traditional function, and occasionally it has been reported that the primary motor cortex reacts to sensory stimulation. Nonetheless, in these cases the primary motor activation is found in addition to a more extensive pattern of activation, obviously including sensory areas; t ...
... Motor function is the traditional function, and occasionally it has been reported that the primary motor cortex reacts to sensory stimulation. Nonetheless, in these cases the primary motor activation is found in addition to a more extensive pattern of activation, obviously including sensory areas; t ...
Hippocampus, cortex, and basal ganglia: Insights
... medial temporal lobe cortex or MTLC, principally the perirhinal cortex) can support a form of recognition memory, but not recall, which depends on the hippocampus proper (for a review, see (Yonelinas, 2002)). In a recognition experiment, a list of stimuli is presented to ...
... medial temporal lobe cortex or MTLC, principally the perirhinal cortex) can support a form of recognition memory, but not recall, which depends on the hippocampus proper (for a review, see (Yonelinas, 2002)). In a recognition experiment, a list of stimuli is presented to ...
AS Revision Conference
... Types of conformity, including internalisation and compliance Obedience, including Milgram’s work The multi-store model, including the concepts of encoding, capacity and duration. ...
... Types of conformity, including internalisation and compliance Obedience, including Milgram’s work The multi-store model, including the concepts of encoding, capacity and duration. ...
An architectural model of conscious and unconscious brain
... sources of knowledge in order to identify an acoustical signal in a complex, noisy, and ambiguous environment (HayesRoth & Lesser, 1977). Such noisy and ambiguous signals are routine in human perception, thought, and motor planning and control. Based on a large body of experiments comparing consciou ...
... sources of knowledge in order to identify an acoustical signal in a complex, noisy, and ambiguous environment (HayesRoth & Lesser, 1977). Such noisy and ambiguous signals are routine in human perception, thought, and motor planning and control. Based on a large body of experiments comparing consciou ...
Towards understanding of the cortical network underlying
... neurons combine to form local circuits and to exhibit the function of each cortical area. We will discuss some new methodological innovations that tackle these challenges. Keywords: inferior temporal cortex; pair-association memory; prefrontal cortex; top-down signal; fMRI of macaque monkeys; local ...
... neurons combine to form local circuits and to exhibit the function of each cortical area. We will discuss some new methodological innovations that tackle these challenges. Keywords: inferior temporal cortex; pair-association memory; prefrontal cortex; top-down signal; fMRI of macaque monkeys; local ...
Version 1.2 - Course Module Slide Options
... Discuss the experiment – hearing Use your hands during the experiment – touch Make observations during the experiment – sight ...
... Discuss the experiment – hearing Use your hands during the experiment – touch Make observations during the experiment – sight ...
17-1 Chapter 17 ACTIVITIES INVOLVING THE CEREBRAL
... critical feature. This is seen most readily in delayed response learning, where the person or animal is required to delay a response until some time after the cues are presented. Monkeys with prefrontal lesions can find a raisin they have seen placed in a covered well if they are allowed to do so wi ...
... critical feature. This is seen most readily in delayed response learning, where the person or animal is required to delay a response until some time after the cues are presented. Monkeys with prefrontal lesions can find a raisin they have seen placed in a covered well if they are allowed to do so wi ...
Brain activation during human navigation: gender
... Several neuronal structures are involved in visuospatial cognition. Studies of human patients with brain lesions as well as animal research demonstrate the importance of the right mediotemporal lobe, including the hippocampus and the hippocampal formation, for the representation of space3–9. Specifi ...
... Several neuronal structures are involved in visuospatial cognition. Studies of human patients with brain lesions as well as animal research demonstrate the importance of the right mediotemporal lobe, including the hippocampus and the hippocampal formation, for the representation of space3–9. Specifi ...
Superior digit memory of abacus experts
... used a two-sample Student’s t-test to compare between the two groups. Only the voxels showing significantly increased activity in abacus experts (p o 0.001 without correction for multiple comparisons) were included in the analysis. The voxels were thresholded at a p value of 0.001 (within-group anal ...
... used a two-sample Student’s t-test to compare between the two groups. Only the voxels showing significantly increased activity in abacus experts (p o 0.001 without correction for multiple comparisons) were included in the analysis. The voxels were thresholded at a p value of 0.001 (within-group anal ...
Powerpoint template for scientific poster
... Discussion The results of this research support the view that in relatively ambiguous police aggression scenarios with a racial component, those low in prejudice activate non-prejudicial attitudes and take into greater account situational factors as opposed to merely attributing the outcome to dispo ...
... Discussion The results of this research support the view that in relatively ambiguous police aggression scenarios with a racial component, those low in prejudice activate non-prejudicial attitudes and take into greater account situational factors as opposed to merely attributing the outcome to dispo ...
Learning and Memory - Ionia County Intermediate School District
... 1. Lesson Opener: Students will complete a bell ringer. It is a connect-the-dots thinking problem. Then take students into the hall for a group activity. Make a secret path in the tiles ahead of time, and have them figure it out as a class. I have one person try at a time, and do not allow talking. ...
... 1. Lesson Opener: Students will complete a bell ringer. It is a connect-the-dots thinking problem. Then take students into the hall for a group activity. Make a secret path in the tiles ahead of time, and have them figure it out as a class. I have one person try at a time, and do not allow talking. ...
Insect olfactory memory in time and space
... potentially suggesting that these cellular memory traces ultimately work through the MB neurons. Nevertheless, MBs must not be viewed as the only anatomical structure in which olfactory memories form. Future studies will undoubtedly reveal the mechanisms underlying these newly discovered memory trac ...
... potentially suggesting that these cellular memory traces ultimately work through the MB neurons. Nevertheless, MBs must not be viewed as the only anatomical structure in which olfactory memories form. Future studies will undoubtedly reveal the mechanisms underlying these newly discovered memory trac ...
Reconstructive memory
Reconstructive memory is a theory of elaborate memory recall proposed within the field of Cognitive Psychology, in which the act of remembering is influenced by various other cognitive processes including Perception Imagination, Semantic memory and Beliefs, amongst others. People view their memories as being a coherent and truthful account of Episodic memory and believe that their perspective is free from error during recall. However the reconstructive process of memory recall is subject to distortion by other intervening cognitive functions such as individual perceptions, social influences, and world knowledge, all of which can lead to errors during reconstruction.