Ordenar Letras
P.4.4 Describe the processes of memory, including encoding, storage, and retrieval.
1
Sometimes a _____ is used when reconstructing memories; A _____ is based on our past experiences and we use them to make sense of the world.
2
Due to state-dependent memory, some advise you to study for a test in the same _____ in which you will take the test, so the location serves as a cue to help recall information.
3
If your reconstruction of a memory is incomplete, you are likely to fill the gaps with information that was never stored in memory, otherwise known as _____ .
4
Chewing gum when you study and when you test is an example of _____ memory, which argues that it is easier to recall information if you are in the same state as when you encoded the information.
5
Our recall of a memory may be _____ by our inferences, attitudes, or experiences, since recall is an active reconstruction process and not a play-by-play recording.
6
You learn a card game as a child, stop playing for years, then learn the game again as an adult, with a few lunch friends. You learn the game the second time with less effort, due to _____ .
7
Recall is The _____ of information is what psychologists call recall, which is used to retrieve hundreds of words from the warehouse of memory.
8
Sheldon Cooper is a character on Big Bang Theory who allegedly has _____ , which means Sheldon can remember details about an image he views for only a moment.
9
If you want to retrieve information easily, you need to make sure that information is filed in many _____ in your brain.
10
A witness giving testimony is likely to include _____ information in their recall, if their memory of the event was disrupted by violence.
11
If heard the name of your first grade teacher, you would _____ it, which shows us that memory is organized to make recognition easy.
12
Lawyers cite many cases of people falsely accused by ____ . Later the _____'s testimony are proven inaccurate, but it’s too late.
13
If someone asked you to _____ the name of your first-grade teacher, you might not remember, which shows us that memory is organized to make recognition easy.
14
Even though people believe their flashbulb memories are _____ , it has been proven that this is not always true.
15
We assume our memories are _____ , because they are storing thousands of informational items, and yet they still find each item efficiently.
16
The assassination of John F. Kennedy and the 911 Attacks, both examples of _____ , the kind of memory that pertains to highly-emotional events.
17
In an experiment on confabulation, it was proven that schemas affected the way people _____ their memories of a crash they watched. The schemas involved were the words contacted, hit, bumped, and smashed.
|