Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Jeopardy – Learn & Mem. Storage Reinforce ment Memory Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $100 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $200 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $300 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $400 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Q $500 Association Potpourri Final Jeopardy 1 $100 Association He emphasized that learning should be explained without any reference to mental processes. 2 $100 Association Who was John B. Watson? 3 $200 Association After experiencing a thunderstorm, we learn that a flash of lightning signals an impending crash of thunder, illustrating this phenomenon. 4 $200 Association What is classical conditioning? 5 $300 Association The tendency for a CR to be evoked by stimuli similar to the CS. 6 $300 Association What is generalization? 7 $400 Association Rats that develop mental representations of mazes they have explored illustrate their ability to maintain these aspects of latent learning. 8 $400 Association What are cognitive maps? 9 $500 Association Promising people monetary rewards for doing what they already enjoy doing is most likely to undermine this type of motivation. 10 $500 Association What is intrinsic motivation? Over-justification Effect 11 $100 Reinforcement B.F. Skinner developed a behavioral technology that included this procedure of behavior modification. 12 $100 Reinforcement What is shaping? The technique of strengthening behavior by reinforcing successive approximations. 13 $200 Reinforcement The more often Matthew is scolded following a temper tantrum, the more frequently he loses his temper; in this case, the scolding serves as this type of reinforcement for his tantrums. 14 $200 Reinforcement What is positive? 15 $300 Reinforcement This reinforcement schedule is one in which a response is reinforced only after a specified number of responses have been made. 16 $300 Decision-making What is fixed-ratio? 17 $400 Reinforcement Myron quit gambling after he lost more than a thousand dollars betting on a horse, illustrating the effects of this aspect of operant conditioning. 18 $400 Reinforcement What is a punishment? 19 $500 Reinforcement The transmission of cultural fads and fashions best illustrate the impact of this type of learning. 20 $500 Reinforcement What is observational learning? 21 $100 Memory The organization of information into meaningful units. 22 $100 Memory What is chunking? 23 $200 Memory The tendency to immediately recall the first and last items in a list better than the middle items. 24 $200 Memory What is the serial position effect? 25 $300 Memory The approximate number of bits of information our immediate short-term memory can store. 26 $300 Memory What is seven? 27 $400 Memory Using the mnemonic ROY G. BIV to remember the colors of the rainbow in the order of wavelength illustrates the use of this organizational system for memory. 28 $400 Memory What is an acronymic mnemonic? 29 $500 Memory We are more likely to remember the words, “typewriter, cigarette, and fire” than the words, “void, process, and inherent,” illustrating the value of this quality to memory 30 $500 Memory What is imagery? 31 $100 Storage By presenting research participants with three rows of three letters each for only a fraction of a second, Sperling demonstrated this type of memory. 32 $100 Storage What is iconic memory? 33 $200 Storage A model of short-term memory composed of (1) the phenomenological loop, (2) the visuospatial sketchpad, (3) a central executive system and (4) the episodic buffer. 34 $200 Storage What is the working memory? 35 $300 Storage A flashbulb memory would be stored in this memory. 36 $300 Storage Who is long-term memory? 37 $400 Storage The process by which information is encoded by its meaning. 38 $400 Storage What is semantic encoding? 39 $500 Storage A long-lasting increased in neural excitability at synapses along a specific neural pathway; possibly the neural basis for learning and memory, involving an increase in the efficiency with which signals are sent across the synapses 40 $500 Storage What is long-term potentiation (LTP)? 41 $100 Potpourri Your ability to immediately recognize a voice over the phone as your mother’s illustrates the value of this type of encoding. 42 $100 Potpourri What is acoustic encoding? 43 $200 Potpourri The process of remembering several pieces of information by mentally associating an image of each with a different location; taking an imaginary walk along a familiar path where images of items to be remembered are associated with certain locations. 44 $200 Potpourri What is method of loci? Sherlock’s mind palace: http://www.smithsonian mag.com/artsculture/secretssherlocks-mind-palace- 45 $300 Potpourri Learning that certain events occur together. 46 $300 Potpourri What is associative learning? 47 $400 Potpourri The reappearance, after a pause, of an extinguished conditioned response. 48 $400 Potpourri What is spontaneous recovery? 49 $500 Potpourri Pets who learn that the sound of an electric can opener signals the arrival of food illustrates this. 50 $500 Potpourri What is classical conditioning? 51 Final Jeopardy Category Threats to Memory 52 Final Jeopardy Question A loss of the ability to create new memories after an event, leading to a partial or complete inability to recall the recent past, while long-term memories from before the event remain intact. 53 Final Jeopardy Answer What is anterograde amnesia? (It’s complement is retrograde amnesia.) 54