Question
Answered step-by-step
ProfDolphin572
What are the three major components of Baddeley’s (1990, 1992,…
What are the three major components of Baddeley’s (1990, 1992, 1993, 1997) working memory model?
Question 1 options:
Decay, interference, and Rehearsal
whole grain crust, spicy pasta sauce, toppings – lower fat cheese, turkey pepperoni, mushrooms, green chili
Articulatory suppression, phonological interference, and irrelevant speech
Phonological loop, the visuo-spatial sketchpad, and the central executive
Question 2
Declarative is to procedural as _______ is to _______.
(Squire et al., 1986, 1990, 2000; Thompson et al., 1994, 2000)
Question 2 options:
semantic; episodic
knowing that; knowing how
facts; personal history
short-term; long-term
Question 3
For Ebbinghaus (1890), “savings” represented
Question 3 options:
the relearning of a previously learned list using fewer learning trials than when the list was first learned.
the ability to remember more and more items over many learning trials.
the amount of time required to learn a list the first time.
the amount of change saved up to buy a huge pile of pizza pie.
Question 4
To remember a Social Security number, you could meaningfully organize and remember the first three numbers, then you could meaningfully organize and remember the second two numbers, and then meaningfully organize and remember the final four. This strategy is best referred to as:
Question 4 options:
recall
coding
chunking
retrieval
Question 5
Which of the following memories is best described as the contents of our conscious awareness?
Question 5 options:
stimulus
short-term
sensory
long-term
Question 6
Ebbinghaus’ (1885) forgetting function/curve shows that when one encodes/studies by cramming and (just) repeating the information to be remembered, there is a large initial rapid decline in memory recall for novel information followed by
Question 6 options:
a leveling out of memory.
a noticeable decrease in memory.
a slight decrease in memory.
a slight increase in memory.
Question 7
The surprising ease with which people form false memories best illustrates that the processes of encoding and retrieval involve:
(Loftus & Palmer, 1974; Roediger & McDermott, 1995)
Question 7 options:
implicit memory.
long-term potentiation.
automatic processing.
memory construction.
Question 8
According to the serial position effect, you will remember more:
Question 8 options:
vocabulary words if you process them acoustically.
items in the middle of a list, than at the beginning and end.
vocabulary words if you process them visually.
items at the beginning and end of a list, than in the middle.
Question 9
Atkinson & Shiffrin’s (1968) classic Information Processing model of memory includes all of the following, EXCEPT:
Question 9 options:
flashbulb memory.
sensory memory.
short-term memory.
long-term memory.
Question 10
In general (for most people most of the time), time spent in developing imagery, chunking, and associating concepts and material to be learned and remembered with yourself and what you already know is more effective than time spent repeating new information again and again.
(Bellezza, 1984, 1992; Brown, Roediger, & McDaniel, 2014; Craik & Lockhart, 1972; Craik & Tulving, 1975; Greenwald & Banaji, 1989; Hyde & Jenkins, 1969; Klein & Kihlstrom, 1986; Rogers et al., 1977)
Question 10 options:
true
false
Question 11
In general (for most people most of the time), which of the following processes is likely to result in the best memory for words?
(Brown, Roediger, & McDaniel, 2014; Craik & Lockhart, 1972; Craik & Tulving, 1975; Hyde & Jenkins, 1969)
Question 11 options:
rote memorization
acoustic encoding
visual encoding
semantic encoding
Question 12
What is Miller’s (1956) “magic number” that suggest how many items or chunks can be held at one time [the capacity of] in short-term memory?
Question 12 options:
9, plus or minus 5
7, plus or minus 2
3, plus or minus 1
4, plus or minus 2
Question 13
Dasie Duke is taking a test in her psychology course. She stares at one of the questions, frustrated. She knows the correct answer, but can Not think of it. This situation is an example of _______ failure.
Question 13 options:
storage
pre-processing
retrieval
encoding