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If memory is required over a short interval, which type of practice is superior?
Question 1 options:
Spaced practice | |
Massed practice | |
Intermittent practice | |
Rehearsal practice |
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Question 2 (1 point)
Where long-term retention is concerned, which type of practice is superior?
Question 2 options:
Spaced practice | |
Massed practice | |
Intermittent practice | |
Rehearsal practice |
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Question 3 (1 point)
One theory explaining why the distributed-processing effect works states that the spacing between repetitions facilitates memory by increasing the likelihood that each occurrence of a repeated item is stored in a different way in memory. This is called
Question 3 options:
Study-Phase Retrieval Accounts | |
Deficient-Processing Accounts | |
Encoding-Variability Accounts | |
Multiprocess Accounts |
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Question 4 (1 point)
Most mnemonic procedures utilize three memory processes. Which of the follow is NOT one of these?
Question 4 options:
Imaging | |
Symbolizing | |
Organizing | |
Associating |
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Question 5 (1 point)
What types of mnemonics are designed to help remember rules, principles, and procedures?
Question 5 options:
Keyword mnemonics | |
Peg word mnemonics | |
Link mnemonics | |
Process mnemonics |
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Question 6 (1 point)
When information comes into one sensory system (e.g., audition) and produces an effect in another sensory system (e.g., vision), this is called
Question 6 options:
Schizophrenia | |
The “S mnemonic” | |
Cross-modal transfer | |
Synesthesia |
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Question 7 (1 point)
According to Ericsson and his colleagues, which of the following is NOT one of the three general principles for exceptional memory?
Question 7 options:
Source memory encoding | |
Meaningful encoding | |
Retrieval structure | |
Speedup |
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Question 8 (1 point)
If a person cannot recall a word, but is able to retrieve some information about the word (e.g., the first letter, the number of syllables, etc.), this is called the _____ phenomenon.
Question 8 options:
Pseudo-amnesia | |
Tip-of-the-tongue | |
Edge-of-consciousness | |
Nearly-known |
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Question 9 (1 point)
The paradigm wherein a person is asked to judge whether two visually presented stimuli (e.g., letters or three-dimensional shapes) are identical or mirror reflections of each other is called
Question 9 options:
Mental scanning | |
Mental rotation | |
Imagery effect | |
Picture superiority effect |
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Question 10 (1 point)
The hypothesized existence of separate but interconnected verbal and imaginal systems is termed
Question 10 options:
Verbal-imagery hypothesis | |
Memory-retrieval hypothesis | |
Multiple-processing hypothesis | |
Dual-coding hypothesis |
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Question 11 (1 point)
Pavio’s Dual Coding theory is consistent with which of the following theories?
Question 11 options:
Baddley and Hitch’s working memory theory | |
Skinner’s behavioral theory | |
Craik and Tulvings levels theory | |
Miller’s magic number theory |
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Question 12 (1 point)
Sometimes people get lost when returning from a destination. The environment looks different coming and going. This can be explained by
Question 12 options:
Euclidean memory | |
Survey memory | |
Orientation dependence | |
Spatial reference systems |
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Question 13 (1 point)
Spatial knowledge is stored in the brain
Question 13 options:
Hierarchically | |
Neuronally | |
Spatially | |
Intrinsically |
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Question 14 (1 point)
Speakers of Western languages tend to preserve _____ spatial relationships when reproducing a pattern from the opposite side.
Question 14 options:
Egocentric | |
Environmental | |
Isotonic | |
Bilateral |
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Question 15 (1 point)
Recent experiments have shown that _____ perform better than ____ on tasks that require memory of the locations and identities of objects
Question 15 options:
Males; females | |
Females; males | |
Dogs; cats | |
Cats; dogs |
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Question 16 (1 point)
Recent experiments have shown that _____ perform better than _____ on tasks that require keeping track of orientation in large-scale environments.
Question 16 options:
Males; females | |
Females; males | |
Dogs; cats | |
Cats; dogs |
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Question 17 (1 point)
When you walk into a classroom and see chairs, desks, and a computer at the front of the classroom, chances are you will go sit in a chair and face the front of the classroom while waiting for the class to start, even though you have never seen this particular classroom. The reason you do this is because you have a _____ of a classroom.
Question 17 options:
Category | |
Concept | |
Representation | |
Image |
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Question 18 (1 point)
Categories are not as neat and obvious as they seem. Many items are thought to be either barely part of, or barely not part of, category. These borderline items illustrate the concept of
Question 18 options:
Psychological Categories | |
Almost-there Categories | |
Borderline Categories | |
Fuzzy Categories |
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Question 19 (1 point)
A category prototype is a(n) _____ member of a category.
Question 19 options:
Borderline | |
Incidental | |
Typical | |
Atypical |
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Question 20 (1 point)
The family resemblance theory would predict that which of the following would be called to mind most quickly when the category “bird” is primed?
Question 20 options:
Penguin | |
Ostrich | |
Ostrich | |
Robin |
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Question 21 (1 point)
In terms of categorization, people generally have a preference for the _____ level when referring to an object.
Question 21 options:
Superordinate | |
Basic | |
Subordinate | |
Nominal |
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Question 22 (1 point)
_____ categories are especially difficult for young children to fully acquire.
Question 22 options:
Superordinate | |
Basic | |
Subordinate | |
Nominal |