2320Lecture22
... Capacity • For example: what if recalling interferes with memory? What if they forgot the information before they could report it? • How could you modify the experiment to measure the instantaneous capacity, before any forgetting can occur? ...
... Capacity • For example: what if recalling interferes with memory? What if they forgot the information before they could report it? • How could you modify the experiment to measure the instantaneous capacity, before any forgetting can occur? ...
Solutions - MsHughesPsychology
... 7. One inconsistency with the movie character’s condition and that of real-life sufferers of this type of amnesia is that: A. Usually women do not experience amnesia B. Real-life sufferers will learn to form new memories within a year C. Real-life sufferers cannot retain new memories for a whole da ...
... 7. One inconsistency with the movie character’s condition and that of real-life sufferers of this type of amnesia is that: A. Usually women do not experience amnesia B. Real-life sufferers will learn to form new memories within a year C. Real-life sufferers cannot retain new memories for a whole da ...
Disorders of Memory
... faces and asked if they can identify them The famous faces belonged to people that reached prominence in many different decades Results: Controls have comparable memory for faces across all decades. RA patients are particular bad at remembering celebrities from more recent decades. ...
... faces and asked if they can identify them The famous faces belonged to people that reached prominence in many different decades Results: Controls have comparable memory for faces across all decades. RA patients are particular bad at remembering celebrities from more recent decades. ...
schema theory
... • Repeated reproduction-the same participant reads and writes down the story from memory 6-7 times with time gaps of between 15 minutes to several years between ...
... • Repeated reproduction-the same participant reads and writes down the story from memory 6-7 times with time gaps of between 15 minutes to several years between ...
1 - U-System
... - ideal performance requires balance between ability to focus attention and to shift one’s focus from time to time; autism has focused attention (ignoring shifting) and ADD/schizophrenia shifts attention (cannot focus) ...
... - ideal performance requires balance between ability to focus attention and to shift one’s focus from time to time; autism has focused attention (ignoring shifting) and ADD/schizophrenia shifts attention (cannot focus) ...
We define collective entrepreneurship as conducting business
... We define collective entrepreneurship as persons conducting business together with at least one partner, sharing ownership with them. Collective entrepreneurship can be, in our opinion, one of the means of risk diversification and fundraising. According to the GEM Russia 2007 APS data 45,8% of curre ...
... We define collective entrepreneurship as persons conducting business together with at least one partner, sharing ownership with them. Collective entrepreneurship can be, in our opinion, one of the means of risk diversification and fundraising. According to the GEM Russia 2007 APS data 45,8% of curre ...
Small System of Neurons
... abilities to learn, etc… qualitatively different from other organisms? Ethologists (Lorenz, Tinbergen, and Frisch) demonstrated that there are commonalities in animal behavior. Thus, such commonality suggests that their may be some underlying common neuronal mechanisms (example: cellular and molecul ...
... abilities to learn, etc… qualitatively different from other organisms? Ethologists (Lorenz, Tinbergen, and Frisch) demonstrated that there are commonalities in animal behavior. Thus, such commonality suggests that their may be some underlying common neuronal mechanisms (example: cellular and molecul ...
Ch07a
... – Both systems are active, and the shifting between the two systems helps to keep the body in homeostasis. – Emergencies activate the sympathetic nervous system and energy is used – The parasympathetic nervous system takes over in peaceful situations and energy is conserved ...
... – Both systems are active, and the shifting between the two systems helps to keep the body in homeostasis. – Emergencies activate the sympathetic nervous system and energy is used – The parasympathetic nervous system takes over in peaceful situations and energy is conserved ...
Freudian flip: Countering the rise of counter-psychology
... read in Kohelet Rabbah, a commentary on Ecclesiastes. Allow me to hypothesize that behavioral psychologists and brain researchers, too, have an unconscious, and that their hearts know a great deal more about human nature than they imagine or come up with in their laboratory experiments. What’s at is ...
... read in Kohelet Rabbah, a commentary on Ecclesiastes. Allow me to hypothesize that behavioral psychologists and brain researchers, too, have an unconscious, and that their hearts know a great deal more about human nature than they imagine or come up with in their laboratory experiments. What’s at is ...
Unit One: Introduction to Physiology: The Cell and General Physiology
... a. Blocks transfer of information from the dominant hemisphere to the motor cortex on the opposite side b. Prevents transfer of somatic and visual info from the right to left hemisphere c. Person would have two entirely separate conscious portions of the brain ...
... a. Blocks transfer of information from the dominant hemisphere to the motor cortex on the opposite side b. Prevents transfer of somatic and visual info from the right to left hemisphere c. Person would have two entirely separate conscious portions of the brain ...
You - Ashton Southard
... mention of relevant facts about those individuals (they were wearing a funny hat or they had long red hair) When older adults are directed to use the memory strategy of elaboration during both study and retrieval, the difference between young and old adults nearly disappears › Clearly, elders’ ass ...
... mention of relevant facts about those individuals (they were wearing a funny hat or they had long red hair) When older adults are directed to use the memory strategy of elaboration during both study and retrieval, the difference between young and old adults nearly disappears › Clearly, elders’ ass ...
Pubertal Influences on Sleep
... the cognitive conditions are right, we will avoid thinking” • The mind is not designed for thinking…and when we can get way with it we don’t! • Instead we rely on memory • The ability to see and move function and operate much more efficiently and reliably than your ability to think…yet seeing is muc ...
... the cognitive conditions are right, we will avoid thinking” • The mind is not designed for thinking…and when we can get way with it we don’t! • Instead we rely on memory • The ability to see and move function and operate much more efficiently and reliably than your ability to think…yet seeing is muc ...
The stress model of Yerkes-Dodson law suggests that at low and
... The results of the experience indicated that a combination of misleading statements and degree to which an event is perceived stressful, the less likely it is for a person to recollect memory accurately, thus the presence of the misinformation effect. Strengths of this experiment included a careful ...
... The results of the experience indicated that a combination of misleading statements and degree to which an event is perceived stressful, the less likely it is for a person to recollect memory accurately, thus the presence of the misinformation effect. Strengths of this experiment included a careful ...
CHAPTER 5
... Relationship of Ethnocentrism and Racism • Racism and ethnocentrism are not synonymous, but they are related • Unlikely to be racist and not ethnocentric. • Possible to be ethnocentric and not racist. • Ethnocentrism is considered innate. • Racism is considered learned. ...
... Relationship of Ethnocentrism and Racism • Racism and ethnocentrism are not synonymous, but they are related • Unlikely to be racist and not ethnocentric. • Possible to be ethnocentric and not racist. • Ethnocentrism is considered innate. • Racism is considered learned. ...
Lecture05
... unrelated words. Then they had to recall all lists a second time cued by the first word of each list. Narrative subjects were to make a story incorporating the words in the list. Control subjects were told just to study each of the list and were given the same amount of time. Results Immediate recal ...
... unrelated words. Then they had to recall all lists a second time cued by the first word of each list. Narrative subjects were to make a story incorporating the words in the list. Control subjects were told just to study each of the list and were given the same amount of time. Results Immediate recal ...
Amnesia Cartoon
... • Lack of recall for biographical information from childhood through adulthood including professional events • unable to recall or recognize lyrics of well-known songs • could not recall any famous cellist and remembered the name of only one composer (Beethoven) • Musical memory • able to sight-read ...
... • Lack of recall for biographical information from childhood through adulthood including professional events • unable to recall or recognize lyrics of well-known songs • could not recall any famous cellist and remembered the name of only one composer (Beethoven) • Musical memory • able to sight-read ...
Mental Imagery
... we store interpretations of events, whether they be verbal or visual, rather than the imaginal components. – Anderson and Bower explain that concrete concepts are coded by a rich set of predicates that bind concepts together. ..."the only difference between the internal representation for a linguist ...
... we store interpretations of events, whether they be verbal or visual, rather than the imaginal components. – Anderson and Bower explain that concrete concepts are coded by a rich set of predicates that bind concepts together. ..."the only difference between the internal representation for a linguist ...
LO: Explain how biological factors may affect one cognitive process.
... post-traumatic stress disorder have problems forgetting emotional memories. ...
... post-traumatic stress disorder have problems forgetting emotional memories. ...
Trauma
... Trauma is experienced at a sensory level and stored as an implicit memory. Implicit memory (sensations of trauma) must be linked with explicit memory (facts or reality of incident) in order for the victim to be able to reorder the experience in a way that is manageable. ...
... Trauma is experienced at a sensory level and stored as an implicit memory. Implicit memory (sensations of trauma) must be linked with explicit memory (facts or reality of incident) in order for the victim to be able to reorder the experience in a way that is manageable. ...
HSTMemoryLecture - Psychology
... • Dentate gyrus has the sparsest activity in the hippocampus, suggesting it plays a critical role in keeping patterns separate. • In our theory, dentate neurons activated when a memory is formed help select an arbitrary subset of CA3 neurons to participate in the new memory. ...
... • Dentate gyrus has the sparsest activity in the hippocampus, suggesting it plays a critical role in keeping patterns separate. • In our theory, dentate neurons activated when a memory is formed help select an arbitrary subset of CA3 neurons to participate in the new memory. ...
Cognitive Information Processing
... of the environmental input they receive for further cognitive processing ...
... of the environmental input they receive for further cognitive processing ...
Module 24 Powerpoint
... get in there, and how do we retrieve it and use it? There are different storage and retrieval/activation systems in the brain for explicit/ declarative memory and for implicit/ procedural memory. When emotions become involved, yet another part of the brain can mark/flag some memories for quicker r ...
... get in there, and how do we retrieve it and use it? There are different storage and retrieval/activation systems in the brain for explicit/ declarative memory and for implicit/ procedural memory. When emotions become involved, yet another part of the brain can mark/flag some memories for quicker r ...
Flashbulb memory etc hand out File
... characteristics and individual differences. Cohen points out that it is difficult to recognise people out of the context in which you would ordinarily have contact with them, 'It is hard to recognise your bank manager at the disco or your dentist at in evening dress', (Cohen 1996). Therefore the dif ...
... characteristics and individual differences. Cohen points out that it is difficult to recognise people out of the context in which you would ordinarily have contact with them, 'It is hard to recognise your bank manager at the disco or your dentist at in evening dress', (Cohen 1996). Therefore the dif ...
Economic Attention Networks: Associative Memory and Resource
... • conserved quantities (except for unusual circumstances – e.g. Economic Stimulus Package) • STI: the immediate urgency of an Atom • LTI: measure of importance for quick recall of Atom • Forgetting process: uses low-LTI and other factors to remove Atoms from quick memory ...
... • conserved quantities (except for unusual circumstances – e.g. Economic Stimulus Package) • STI: the immediate urgency of an Atom • LTI: measure of importance for quick recall of Atom • Forgetting process: uses low-LTI and other factors to remove Atoms from quick memory ...