Cog. Psych

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1. Semester Psychologie Flashcards on Cog. Psych, created by Ronja B on 23/03/2018.
Ronja B
Flashcards by Ronja B, updated more than 1 year ago
Ronja B
Created by Ronja B over 6 years ago
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Critical Period Stage in the life during which the nervous system is especially sensitive to certain environmental stimuli.
Parasomnia  Sleep disorders that involve unwanted experiences that occur while you are falling asleep, sleeping or waking up. 
Episodic Memory Explicit Memory Involve specific events Allows ‘mental time-travel’ You “remember” episodic memories
Semantic Memory Explicit Memory Involves facts and knowledge Without reference to any specific experience You “know” semantic memories
Explicit/declarative memory Conscious Memory (Episodic and Semantic)
“Flashbulb” memories Particularly vivid and distinctive memories for events (Suprisal, consequentiality, Rehearsal Meaningfulness, emotional arousal)
Implicit memory - procedural acquired and used unconsciously, and can affect thoughts and behaviours
priming Implicit memory exposure to one stimulus influences a response to a subsequent stimulus (Sentences heard previously are more likely to be accepted as true, reading upside down is remembered longer than what was actually read)
procedural memory Implicit memory performance of particular types of tasks without conscious awareness of these previous experiences (knowing movements to open an app, playing guitar hero)
Intentional Learning learning that is motivated with intention and is usually goal directed
Incidental Learning takes place without any intent to learn
Acquisition Gradual formation of formation between CS and US Encompasses both intentional learning and incidental learning
Primacy Effect its easier to recall the information one hears in the beginning of a series (if repeated to oneself)
recency effect easier to recall information at the end of a series because it is still recent
Mental Capacity 7 +/- 2
chunks/chunking Connecting information in a useful way (Roman Numerals - Star Wars episodes) WM capacity can be increased by chunking information effectively
Central Executive central executive functions as a supervisory system that controls information flow from and to its hypothesized subordinate or "slave" systems Baddeley and Hitch
Visuospatial sketchpad short-term storage of information seen (visual semantics) Baddeley and Hitch
phonological loop short-term storage of information heard (language) Baddeley and Hitch
Episodic buffer links visual, spatial and verbal information with a sense of chronological ordering
Level of processing Greater level of brain activity during initial memory acquisition related to better recall
Shallow processing stimulus is processed on its superficial and perceptual features instead of its meaning (remember all words with a capital letter) -> short memory
deep processing processing of a stimulus for its meaningful properties (remember all words that are animals) -> longer memory
Maintenance rehearsal form of processing information (repetition of a series of numbers) not effective
Mnemonics "Eselsbrücken" rhymes, acronyms, mental images (Method of Loci) not really useful for understanding
retrograde amnesia Memory from before the moment of brain injury is being disrupted (oppposite anterograde amnesia)
Retrieval cues hints that make you think of a memory most effective when they match the level of processing
Encoding specificity principle memories more easily retrieved if external conditions at the time of retrieval are similar to those in existence at the time the memory was stored (happy memories easier to recall when happy)
Context reinstatement memories easier to retrieve when in same situation as when learned (information learned under water is easier recall under water than on land)
retention interval time between learning and retrieving Retrieval decreases as retention interval increase
decay loosing memory over time
interference blocking of learning and or recall by remembering conflicting material
Proactive interference Old information interferes with the retrieval of more recently learned information
Retroactive interference More recently learned information interferes with retrieval of older information
Misinformation effect participant will remember misleading information that the experimenter provided instead of information which was supposed to be remembered
Confirmation bias we are more likely to believe things that support our own beliefs
Own race bias recognize and differentiate between faces of our own race more easily than faces of another race
Own Age Bias easier to recognize people our age
Own-gender bias easier to recognize people of our own gender
Schemas mental representations that summarise knowledge about an event or situation
Rationalisation remembering things according to own view (people changing fantasy story to fit their knowledge) Transformation of details into more familiar and conventional
leveling more likely to forget information which cannot be put into schema
sharpening stronger memory of information that fits known schema
Reconstructive Memory remembering is influenced by various other cognitive processes including perception, imagination, semantic memory and beliefs
learning lasting change in behaviour that is the result of experience
Habituation Decline in an organism's response to a stimulus Sensitive to the pattern stimuli presentation
Dishabituation increase in a response caused by a change in something familiar
Classical conditioning when a conditioned stimulus evokes a conditioned response because of being paired with a unconditioned stimulus that naturally evokes an unconditioned response
Unconditioned response (UR) naturally occurring response (food - salivation)
Unconditioned Stimulus (US) naturally occurring stimulus that elicits UR (food - salivation)
conditioned response (CR) a stimulus that is original neutral but can be conditioned into producing a response by pairing with an US
Conditioned Stimulus (CS) a response to a CS produced by pairing it with an US
Biological preparedness idea that people and animals are inherently inclined to form associations between certain stimuli and responses (Not all phobias occur with the same frequency )
Second-order conditioning Conditioning where the US was earlier a CS (always drinking wine with a cigarette connected to pleasurable feeling -> associating wine with needing to smoke and gaining pleasure)
extinction disappearance of a previously learned behaviour when the behaviour is not reinforced
Excitatory connection associating a stimulus with something positive (bell leads to food)
Inhibitory connection associating a stimulus with something negative or nothing at all (in extinction) (Bell without food)
CS+ Conditioned stimulus that tells you something is happening (red light means shock)
CS- (inhibitor) Conditioned stimulus that tells you something is not going to happen (yellow light means no shock) -> more calm than baseline during CS-
Backward pairing US (shock) presented before CS (tone) does not work well for conditioning
Simultaneous pairing two stimuli presented at the same time
Forward pairing CS (tone) began before the US (shock) works well when difference is small (0.5s) then decreases with longer time between CS and US
blocking second order conditioning does not happen when second order stimulus is redundant (broom playing GoT song)
Spontaneous recovery if CS is presented after extinction it produces spontaneous recovery
generalisation gradient CS is also produced when CS is slightly different (the bigger the difference the lesser the response)
Homeostasis psychological and physiological state of stability
Contingency (theory) for learning to take place, a stimulus must provide the subject information about the likelihood that certain events will occur (is the appearance of the bell contingent to the appearance of the food)
One-trial learning Learning in one presentation (taste aversions - bad food leads to dislike for long time)
Elaborative interrogation turning facts to be learned into why-questions and then answering them activates schemas 2/3
summarisation Searching for and extracting meaning lack of evidence 1/3
Highlighting and underlining pick out most important sections, must consider meaning Overall no effect of highlighting versus control groups 1/3
Isolation effect Unique items are better remembered than less distinctive items
rereading rereading the information supplied 1/3
Quantitative hypothesis (rereading) Increases the amount of information encoded
Qualitative hypothesis Emphasis is placed on conceptual organisation and processing of main ideas
Massed practice Cramming learning in short time
spaced practice rereading with longer intervals of breaks outperforms massed practice in delayed tests
Practice testing repeating infos in tests Enhances retention of information by triggering elaborative retrieval processes 3/3
Distributed practice practicing multiple times over a long time 3/3
Lag effects recall after long lags between learning is better versus short lags
Deficient processing even though an individual has seen a task performed it is unlikely that they can reproduce that action without hands-on training
Procrastination scallops Students will not engage in distributed study unless forced to
Interleaved practice alternate practice of different kinds of items or problems 2/3
Blocked study all content from one subtopic if studied before moving on to the next
phoneme smallest unit of language that can distinguish one word from another (cat-rat-bat)
allophones changing the allophone changes the sound of the realization of word but does not change the meaning of the word
cooing 2 months single vowel sounds
babbling 3-4 months consonant vowel pairs, ba, da, ma
reduplicated babbling 6 months babababa
non-reduplicated babbling 7-10 months reflects sounds and intonations of mother tongue
holophrases 12-18 months ‘getti instead of spaghetti
telegraphic speech 18-24 months Two-word phrases ordered according to syntactic rules
basic-level words denote the whole first (dog, cat, bread)
superordinates high level description (animal, food)
subordinates lower level description (beagle, wheatbread)
overextension Specific names sometimes treated as basic-level terms (calling all dogs Lotta)
underextension basic level terms used as specific names (naming stuffed animal "dog")
fast-mapping used by children new concept is learned (or a new hypothesis formed) based only on a single exposure to a given unit of information
Simultaneous bilingualism learning two languages at the same time
sequential bilingualism learning one language first and then a second language right after the first
over-regularisation grammatical errors where language rules are applied too generally (go - goed, instead of go - went)
Homesign sign language spoken at home
Bilingual advantage Need to constantly inhibit other language, leads to improved cognitive control
Language acquisition device innate system that allows to combine words into grammatically consistent, new words and to understand the meaning of sentences they hear
Universal grammar built-in storehouse of rules common to all languages
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