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Test your basic knowledge |
GRE Psychology: Memory
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Subjects
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gre
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psychology
Instructions:
Answer 50 questions in 15 minutes.
If you are not ready to take this test, you can
study here
.
Match each statement with the correct term.
Don't refresh. All questions and answers are randomly picked and ordered every time you load a test.
This is a study tool. The 3 wrong answers for each question are randomly chosen from answers to other questions. So, you might find at times the answers obvious, but you will see it re-enforces your understanding as you take the test each time.
1. Ebbinghaus - sharp drop in savings immediately after learning then levels off downwards; but some psychologists doubt generalization from nonsense syllables
Procedural memory
Forgetting curve
Short-term memory
Semantic memory
2. General knowledge of the world
Semantic memory
Brenda Milner
Recognition
Flashbulb memories
3. Serial learning Serial-anticipation learning Paired-associate learning Free-recall learning
Retroactive interference
Recall task involving order of items on a list
Types of verbal learning and memory tasks
Sensory memory (+types)
4. Sensory memory for auditory sensations
Recall task involving order of items on a list
Fergus Craik and Robert Lockhart
Flashbulb memories
Echoic memory
5. Forgetting theory - memories fade with time
Decay (or trace) theory
Karl Lashley
Declarative memory
Long-term memory
6. Key to transferring items to LTM; primary (maintenance) rehearsal - secondary (elaborative) rehearsal
E.R. Kandel
Rehearsal (+types)
Sensory memory (+types)
Brenda Milner
7. Generate information on their own; cued and free
Serial learning/recall (memory effects)
Recall (+types)
George Sperling
Iconic memory
8. Proactive interference causes proactive inhibition - retroactive interference causes retroactive inhibition
Semantic memory
Sensory memory (+types)
Paired-associate learning
Interference types
9. Anything one might recall is easily recognized - multiple-choice test is easier than essay test
Zeigarnik effect
Elizabeth Loftus
Generation-recognition model
Factors that make a list easier to learn and retrieve
10. Measures how much info remains in LTM (information retention) by assessing how long it takes to learn something the second time
Iconic memory
Forgetting curve
Savings
Primacy and recency effects
11. Details - events - discrete knowledge
Explicit memory
Episodic memory
Zeigarnik effect
Eidetic imagery
12. Allan Paivio - items better remembered if encoded both visually and semantically (icons/images+understanding)
Icon
Dual code hypothesis
George Sperling
Implicit memory
13. Forgetting curve; lists of nonsense syllables to study STM
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Elizabeth Loftus
Declarative memory
Forgetting theories
14. Sensory - short term - long term
Stages of memory
Serial learning/recall (memory effects)
Paired-associate learning
George Miller
15. Forgetting theory - competing information blocks retrieval (study: memorize list - one group sleeps while other group solves riddles for same amount of time - slept is likelier to remember more)
Paired-associate learning
Interference theory
Stages of memory
Primary (maintenance) rehearsal
16. Repeating material to hold in STM
Semantic memory
Flashbulb memories
Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
Primary (maintenance) rehearsal
17. Primary and recency effects
Serial-anticipation learning
Echoic memory
Clustering
LTM not subject to
18. Tendency to recall pursued but incomplete tasks better than completed ones - Students who suspend their study - during which they do unrelated activities (such as studying unrelated subjects or playing games) - will remember material better than stud
Retroactive interference
Forgetting curve
Brenda Milner
Zeigarnik effect
19. Measured through presenting subjects with items they are not supposed to try to memorize - then test for learning
Iconic memory
Incidental learning
Recall (+types)
Primacy and recency effects
20. The first and last few items learned are easiest to remember. first items are due to the benefit of most rehearsal and exposure. last item is easy to remember because there has been less time for decay
Primacy and recency effects
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Brenda Milner
Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
21. Knowing something and being consciously aware of knowing it - such as knowing a fact
Interference theory
Stages of memory
Frederick Bartlett
Explicit memory
22. Recollections that seem burned into memory - especially traumatic ones
Flashbulb memories
Zeigarnik effect
Primacy and recency effects
Backward masking
23. Similar to serial learning but asked to recall one item at a time
Encoding specificity principle
Serial-anticipation learning
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Backward masking
24. LTM is subject to...material is easier to be remembered if retrieved in same context as learning/storage
Procedural memory
Encoding specificity principle
Interference theory
Proactive interference
25. Temporary memory needed to perform the task that someone is working on at that moment
Proactive interference
Working memory
Long-term memory
Primacy and recency effects
26. Disrupting information that was learned prior to new items were presented
Explicit memory
Proactive interference
Recall (+types)
Episodic memory
27. Learning and recall depend on depth of processing; from most superficial phonological (pronunciation) to deep semantic level - the deeper the easier to learn and recall
Primary (maintenance) rehearsal
Allan Paivio
Fergus Craik and Robert Lockhart
Icon
28. Tendency to group similar items in memory whether learned together or not - often into conceptual or semantic hierarchies
Semantic memory
Recall task involving order of items on a list
Proactive interference
Clustering
29. On the verge of retrieval
Forgetting theories
Dual code hypothesis
Working memory
Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
30. It takes longer to make association between pictures than between words --> Pictures must be mentally put into words before associations can be made
Backward masking
Frederick Bartlett
Generation-recognition model
Association between picture vs. words
31. When subjects are exposed to bright flash or new pattern before the iconic image fades - the 1st image will be erased
State-dependent memory
Backward masking
Hermann Ebbinghaus
Zeigarnik effect
32. Dual code hypothesis
Explicit memory
Implicit memory
Episodic memory
Allan Paivio
33. Sperling - sensory memory for vision - people could see more than they can remember - a partial report in an experiment involving random letters showed people forgot other letters by the time they wrote first ones down
Generation-recognition model
Recall task involving order of items on a list
Iconic memory
Hermann Ebbinghaus
34. Patient 'HM' lesion of hippocampus - remembered things before surgery - STM intact - but could not store new LTMs (anterograde amnesia)
Implicit memory
Tachistoscope
Episodic memory
Brenda Milner
35. By studying sea slug Aplysia - similar ideas to Donald Hebb involving synaptic and neural pathway changes in memory; young chicks brains are altered with learning and memory
Icon
Declarative memory
E.R. Kandel
George Miller
36. Acoustic dissimilarity - semantic dissimilarity - brevity - familiarity - concreteness - meaning - importance to subject
Factors that make a list easier to learn and retrieve
Sensory memory (+types)
Recognition
Association between picture vs. words
37. STM capacity of 7±2
Cued recall
Savings
George Miller
Stages of memory
38. Disrupting information that was learned after new items were presented
Retroactive interference
Recognition
Interference types
Incidental learning
39. The way behaviourists explain memory; one item learned with - then cues the recall of - another
Donald Hebb
Paired-associate learning
Retroactive interference
Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
40. Knowing something without being aware of knowing it 'HM' --> cannot remember anything he did
Primary (maintenance) rehearsal
Chunking
Recall task involving order of items on a list
Implicit memory
41. Recall begins with task Ex: fill-in-the-blank' test
Flashbulb memories
Types of verbal learning and memory tasks
Cued recall
Zeigarnik effect
42. Requires subjects to recognize things learned in the past - Multiple choice test
Association between picture vs. words
Recognition
Zeigarnik effect
Semantic memory
43. Photographic memory - more common in children and rural
Incidental learning
Stages of memory
Chunking
Eidetic imagery
44. Instrument used to present visual material (words/images) to subjects for a fraction of a second - in cognitive or memory experiments
Frederick Bartlett
Allan Paivio
Brenda Milner
Tachistoscope
45. Capable of permanent retention - most learned semantically for meaning - measured by recognition - recall - and savings - Subject to encoding specificity principle - but not primacy/recency effects
Encoding specificity principle
Donald Hebb
Paired-associate learning
Long-term memory
46. Learned and recalled in order; primacy and recency effects; serial-position U-curve demonstrates savings
Mnemonics
Serial learning/recall (memory effects)
Secondary (elaborative) rehearsal
Eidetic imagery
47. Last seconds - connects perception and memory - includes iconic and echoic memory
Allan Paivio
Sensory memory (+types)
Eidetic imagery
Factors that make a list easier to learn and retrieve
48. Memory involves changes in synpases and neural pathways to make a memory tree
Interference types
Donald Hebb
Cued recall
Declarative memory
49. Temporary - seconds or minutes - largely auditory - items coded phonologically - 7+/- 2 capacity - chunking - subjective to interference and inhibition
Short-term memory
Savings
Interference types
Donald Hebb
50. Memory is reconstructive rather than rote - People are more likely to remember ideas/semantics more than details/grammar
Frederick Bartlett
Stages of memory
Association between picture vs. words
Primary (maintenance) rehearsal