Deck 13: The Biology of Learning and Memory

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Question
Impaired arousal and attention in Alzheimer's patients is largely due to damage to the basal forebrain.
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Question
The UCR and the CR are always the same.
Question
Punishment makes it less likely for a behavior to occur again in the future.
Question
Procedural memory deals with the ability to state a memory in words.
Question
A common test of working memory is the delayed response task.
Question
Information in short term memory is lost more easily than long term memory.
Question
The genes controlling early-onset Alzheimer's disease cause a protein called amyloid-?
Question
To replace the concept of short-term memory, A. D. Baddeley and G. J. Hitch introduced the term delayed memory to refer to the way we store information while we are working at it.
Question
Korsakoff's patients perform better on tasks of implicit memory than explicit memory.
Question
A distinctive symptom of Korsakoff's syndrome is confabulation, in which patients guess to fill in memory gaps.
Question
Eye-blink conditioning depends on the lateral interpositus nucleus.
Question
Lashley was able to determine that the frontal lobe cortex is more important for memories than the parietal lobe cortex.
Question
In operant conditioning, an individual's response leads to a reinforcer or punishment.
Question
Hippocampal damage impairs spatial memory.
Question
H.M. was unable to form any kind of new memories after his surgery.
Question
H. M. had particularly severe impairment of episodic memories, or memories of single events.
Question
Alzheimer's patients have better explicit memory than implicit memory.
Question
Thiamine is necessary for the proper metabolism of glucose.
Question
The lateral interpositus nucleus in the cerebellum is essential for learning.
Question
In searching for the engram, Karl Lashley found that removal of larger areas of cortex resulted in the greatest impairment of memory.
Question
Operant conditioning is to ____ as classical conditioning is to ____.

A) reinforcement; punishment
B) CS; UCS
C) association; consequences
D) consequences; association
Question
In operant conditioning, reinforcement is:

A) any food that the organism likes.
B) a stimulus that produces a reflexive response.
C) an event that decreases the future probability of a response.
D) an event that increases the future probability of a response.
Question
In Pavlov's experiments, he presented a sound followed by meat. Gradually the sound came to elicit salivation. The salivation to the meat in this experiment was the:

A) unconditioned stimulus.
B) unconditioned response.
C) conditioned stimulus.
D) conditioned response.
Question
Lashley's term "engram" refers to:

A) a drug that facilitates learning.
B) the physical representation of learning.
C) a procedure that improved memory.
D) an automatic response to a sensory stimulus.
Question
Sensitization is the opposite of habituation.
Question
Giving a dolphin a treat when it does a summersault would be considered a(n):

A) reinforcement.
B) punishment.
C) unconditioned response.
D) conditioned response.
Question
Which of the following is hardest to classify as classical or operant conditioning?

A) pressing a lever to get food
B) pressing a lever to escape shock
C) salivating after a sound previously paired with food
D) song learning by male birds
Question
Lashley trained rats on a variety of mazes, then made deep cuts in their cortexes. He found that the cuts produced:

A) a temporary impairment.
B) a permanent impairment.
C) day-to-day fluctuations in performance.
D) little apparent effect.
Question
Drugs used to treat Alzheimer's disease affect activity of the cortex by enhancing the effects of acetylcholine.
Question
Karl Lashley called the physical basis of learning a(n):

A) amyloid.
B) engram.
C) plaque.
D) synapse.
Question
What should be the usual relationship between the conditioned stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus in classical conditioning?

A) The conditioned stimulus should be presented first.
B) The unconditioned stimulus should be presented first.
C) They should be presented simultaneously.
D) It depends on what each stimulus is.
Question
Pavlov believed that classical conditioning reflected a strengthened connection between two brain areas that were activated by:

A) reinforcement and punishment.
B) the response and a consequence.
C) the UCS and UCR.
D) the CS and UCS.
Question
In operant conditioning, punishment is:

A) a stimulus that produces a reflexive response.
B) an event that decreases the future probability of a response.
C) an event that increases the future probability of a response.
D) an event that prevents a response.
Question
Lashley found that a deep cut in a rat's cerebral cortex completely eliminated the effects of learning under what circumstances, if any?

A) if the cut was made after the learning
B) if the learned task was simple
C) if the learned task was complex
D) under none of the circumstances he studied
Question
After LTP is established, NMDA receptors are not required to maintain it.
Question
In Pavlov's experiments, he presented a sound followed by meat. Gradually the sound came to elicit salivation. The meat in this experiment was the:

A) unconditioned stimulus.
B) unconditioned response.
C) conditioned stimulus.
D) conditioned response.
Question
In his search for the engram, Lashley was testing:

A) Pavlov's view of classical conditioning.
B) Skinner's view of operant conditioning.
C) Garcia's view of taste aversion learning.
D) Bandura's view of social learning.
Question
Habituation is a decrease in response to a stimulus that is presented repeatedly and accompanied by no change in other stimuli.
Question
In Pavlov's experiments, he presented a sound followed by meat. Gradually the sound came to elicit salivation. The salivation to the sound in this experiment was the:

A) unconditioned stimulus.
B) unconditioned response.
C) conditioned stimulus.
D) conditioned response.
Question
In Pavlov's experiments he presented a sound followed by meat. Gradually the sound came to elicit salivation. The sound in this experiment would be considered the:

A) unconditioned stimulus.
B) unconditioned response.
C) conditioned stimulus.
D) conditioned response.
Question
Lashley's conclusions from his engram research were based on certain unnecessary assumptions, which later psychologists have discarded. One of those assumptions was that the:

A) cerebral cortex is the best or only place to search for an engram.
B) left hemisphere of the brain is simply the mirror image of the right hemisphere. .
C) physiological mechanisms of learning in rats are similar to those in humans.
D) hippocampus is more important for storage than it is for retrieval.
Question
The cortex works as a whole, and the more cortex the better, defines:

A) operant conditioning.
B) classical conditioning.
C) equipotentiality.
D) mass action.
Question
Which of the following is one of the reasons that Lashley failed at finding the engram?

A) He used poor surgical methods.
B) Some memories do not depend on the cortex.
C) The engram is continually changing location in the cortex.
D) Classical conditioning had not been discovered yet.
Question
If the lateral interpositus nucleus is temporarily suppressed during classical conditioning of the eyeblink response, what happens?

A) After the nucleus recovers, the animal remembers the training fully.
B) Future conditioning occurs as if the animal had no previous training.
C) After the nucleus recovers, the animal learns more slowly than usual.
D) Future conditioning occurs rapidly, but the animal also forgets rapidly.
Question
Research indicates that the red nucleus is necessary for:

A) the learning of a conditioned response.
B) the performance of a conditioned response.
C) the learning AND performance of a conditioned response.
D) suppression of the conditioned response.
Question
Preventing learning is to ____ as suppressing a response is to ____.

A) classical conditioning; operant conditioning
B) operant conditioning; classical conditioning
C) the red nucleus; the lateral interpositus nucleus
D) the lateral interpositus nucleus; the red nucleus
Question
In studies of eyelid conditioning in rabbits, Thompson and his colleagues have demonstrated that learning for this conditioned response takes place in the:

A) red nucleus of the midbrain.
B) temporal lobe of the cerebral cortex.
C) lateral interpositus nucleus of the cerebellum.
D) ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus.
Question
Lashley's conclusions from his engram research were based on certain unnecessary assumptions, which later psychologists have discarded. One of those assumptions was that the:

A) brain treats all kinds of memory the same way.
B) left hemisphere of the brain is simply the mirror image of the right hemisphere.
C) physiological mechanisms of learning in rats are similar to those in humans.
D) hippocampus is more important for storage than it is for retrieval.
Question
While studying classical conditioning of the eyelid response in rabbits, investigators suppress the activity of the red nucleus. What results will occur?

A) That procedure will not interfere with learning.
B) Learning will not occur.
C) The response will not occur, but later testing will reveal that learning occurred.
D) The rabbit will show immediate evidence of learning, but it will forget rapidly.
Question
Thompson identified one nucleus of the cerebellum, the ____, as essential for learning.

A) anterior nucleus
B) fastigial nucleus
C) red nucleus
D) lateral interpositus nucleus
Question
Lashley found that when he removed parts of the brain:

A) only the removal of frontal lobe tissue disrupted performance.
B) only the removal of parietal lobe tissue disrupted performance.
C) the amount of tissue removed was more important than its location.
D) he found no loss of memories at all.
Question
Recent researchers have felt that Lashley's conclusions about the results of his search for the engram reflected some inappropriate assumptions. One of those assumptions was that:

A) memory involves a physical change in the nervous system.
B) that all kinds of memory are physiologically the same.
C) more than one kind of memory exists.
D) different memories involve different sets of neurons.
Question
The cerebellum's role in memories may be limited to what kind of learning or memory?

A) language learning
B) imprinting
C) classical conditioning
D) operant conditioning
Question
"All parts of the cortex contribute equally to complex behaviors such as learning" defines:

A) operant conditioning.
B) classical conditioning.
C) equipotentiality.
D) mass action.
Question
Short-term memory may be characterized as:

A) having a limited capacity.
B) having an unlimited capacity.
C) elaborative in nature.
D) rehearsal free.
Question
Which of the following is one of the reasons that Lashley failed at finding the engram?

A) He used poor surgical methods.
B) Not all memories are physiologically the same.
C) The engram is continually changing location in the cortex.
D) Classical conditioning had not been discovered yet.
Question
In studies that paired a tone with an air puff to the cornea of rabbits, learning was found to depend on one nucleus of the:

A) cerebellum.
B) hypothalamus.
C) thalamus.
D) hippocampus.
Question
A person with damage to their cerebellum may experience several problems, including:

A) poor eyesight.
B) inability to be classically conditioned.
C) weakened conditioned eye blinks.
D) exaggerated eye blinking.
Question
Recent researchers have felt that Lashley's conclusions about the results of his search for the engram reflected some inappropriate assumptions. One of those assumptions was that:

A) memory involves a physical change in the nervous system.
B) all kinds of memory are physiologically the same.
C) more than one kind of memory exists.
D) different memories change different sets of neurons.
Question
Donald Hebb (1949) distinguished between two types of memory that he called

A) implicit and explicit.
B) declarative and procedural.
C) short-term and long-term.
D) repressed and unrepressed
Question
Studies on ____ help clarify the distinctions among different kinds of memory and enable us to explore the mechanisms of memory.

A) dementia
B) amnesia
C) epilepsy
D) stroke
Question
The delayed response task requires responding to something that you saw or heard ____.

A) in the distant past
B) a short while ago
C) right at that time
D) in a meaningful way
Question
Which brain area is active in monkeys during a delay when they have to remember the location of a light and look there only after a several-second delay?

A) cerebellum
B) the prefrontal cortex
C) the occipital lobes
D) ventromedial hypothalamus
Question
H.M. was able to learn and remember:

A) people's names.
B) how to find his way to a new residence.
C) skills like mazes and puzzles.
D) events in recent history.
Question
The general function of working memory is to:

A) hold information until it has time to get to long-term storage.
B) store memories of life events permanently.
C) attend to and operate on current information.
D) store information related to repetitious motor movements.
Question
Forgetting events prior to the time of brain damage is a characteristic of ____ amnesia.

A) retrograde
B) anterograde
C) proactive
D) procedural
Question
Compared to young adults, aging humans with poor working memory have ____ activity in the prefrontal cortex and aging humans with intact working memory have ____ activity in the prefrontal cortex.

A) decreased, decreased
B) increased, increased
C) increased, decreased
D) decreased, increased
Question
The patient H.M., who had major surgery for severe epilepsy in 1953, suffered a severe difficulty in remembering events:

A) in working memory.
B) during or after 1953.
C) long before 1953.
D) of his childhood.
Question
Which of the following drug types is most promising for treating people with failing memory?

A) Tranquilizers
B) Endorphins
C) Depressants
D) Stimulants
Question
Hebb believed that short-term memory:

A) should not be distinguished from long-term memory.
B) was a temporary holding station on the way to long-term memory.
C) was more important than long-term memory.
D) was low-level memory.
Question
According to Baddeley and Hitch, a common test of working memory is the:

A) delayed response task
B) reconsolidation task
C) consolidation task
D) working memory task
Question
After his surgery, H.M. had the most difficulty with:

A) learning new procedural tasks.
B) remembering events long before the surgery.
C) being able to define new English words.
D) IQ tests.
Question
Anterograde amnesia is to ____ as retrograde amnesia is to ____.

A) storing new memories; memories of the past
B) memories just prior to the damage; memories from childhood
C) short-term memory; long-term memory
D) emotional memories; non-emotional memories
Question
Donald Hebb distinguished between two kinds of memory because he could not imagine how a single kind of brain change could be both:

A) axonal and synaptic.
B) cognitive and muscular.
C) positive and negative.
D) quick and permanent.
Question
A peculiarity of the memory of the neurological patient H.M. was that he was able to:

A) retain new skills but not remember having learned them.
B) form new long-term memories but not short-term memories.
C) find his way to a new residence.
D) remember people's names but not which name went with which person.
Question
The patient H.M. suffered severe memory disorders following a surgical operation that removed the:

A) corpus callosum.
B) hippocampus.
C) lateral interpositus nucleus and hypothalamus.
D) prefrontal cortex and dorsomedial thalamus.
Question
One would most accurately describe H.M.'s memory problems as the inability to form:

A) short-term memories.
B) new implicit memories.
C) new episodic memories.
D) new procedural memories.
Question
Retrograde amnesia is to ____ as anterograde amnesia is to ____.

A) temporary loss of memory; permanent loss of memory
B) loss of short-term memory; loss of long-term memory
C) inability to form new memories; loss of memory for old events
D) loss of memory for old events; inability to form new memories
Question
The inability to form memories for events that happened after brain damage is a characteristic of ____ amnesia.

A) retrograde
B) anterograde
C) proactive
D) procedural
Question
Researchers proposed that all information initially entered a short-term storage, where it stayed until the brain had time to ____ it into long-term memory.

A) transpose
B) rehearse
C) consolidate
D) transfer
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Deck 13: The Biology of Learning and Memory
1
Impaired arousal and attention in Alzheimer's patients is largely due to damage to the basal forebrain.
True
2
The UCR and the CR are always the same.
False
3
Punishment makes it less likely for a behavior to occur again in the future.
True
4
Procedural memory deals with the ability to state a memory in words.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
A common test of working memory is the delayed response task.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Information in short term memory is lost more easily than long term memory.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The genes controlling early-onset Alzheimer's disease cause a protein called amyloid-?
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
To replace the concept of short-term memory, A. D. Baddeley and G. J. Hitch introduced the term delayed memory to refer to the way we store information while we are working at it.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Korsakoff's patients perform better on tasks of implicit memory than explicit memory.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
10
A distinctive symptom of Korsakoff's syndrome is confabulation, in which patients guess to fill in memory gaps.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
Eye-blink conditioning depends on the lateral interpositus nucleus.
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k this deck
12
Lashley was able to determine that the frontal lobe cortex is more important for memories than the parietal lobe cortex.
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k this deck
13
In operant conditioning, an individual's response leads to a reinforcer or punishment.
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k this deck
14
Hippocampal damage impairs spatial memory.
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k this deck
15
H.M. was unable to form any kind of new memories after his surgery.
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k this deck
16
H. M. had particularly severe impairment of episodic memories, or memories of single events.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
17
Alzheimer's patients have better explicit memory than implicit memory.
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k this deck
18
Thiamine is necessary for the proper metabolism of glucose.
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k this deck
19
The lateral interpositus nucleus in the cerebellum is essential for learning.
Unlock Deck
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k this deck
20
In searching for the engram, Karl Lashley found that removal of larger areas of cortex resulted in the greatest impairment of memory.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Operant conditioning is to ____ as classical conditioning is to ____.

A) reinforcement; punishment
B) CS; UCS
C) association; consequences
D) consequences; association
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Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
In operant conditioning, reinforcement is:

A) any food that the organism likes.
B) a stimulus that produces a reflexive response.
C) an event that decreases the future probability of a response.
D) an event that increases the future probability of a response.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
In Pavlov's experiments, he presented a sound followed by meat. Gradually the sound came to elicit salivation. The salivation to the meat in this experiment was the:

A) unconditioned stimulus.
B) unconditioned response.
C) conditioned stimulus.
D) conditioned response.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Lashley's term "engram" refers to:

A) a drug that facilitates learning.
B) the physical representation of learning.
C) a procedure that improved memory.
D) an automatic response to a sensory stimulus.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Sensitization is the opposite of habituation.
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k this deck
26
Giving a dolphin a treat when it does a summersault would be considered a(n):

A) reinforcement.
B) punishment.
C) unconditioned response.
D) conditioned response.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Which of the following is hardest to classify as classical or operant conditioning?

A) pressing a lever to get food
B) pressing a lever to escape shock
C) salivating after a sound previously paired with food
D) song learning by male birds
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Lashley trained rats on a variety of mazes, then made deep cuts in their cortexes. He found that the cuts produced:

A) a temporary impairment.
B) a permanent impairment.
C) day-to-day fluctuations in performance.
D) little apparent effect.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Drugs used to treat Alzheimer's disease affect activity of the cortex by enhancing the effects of acetylcholine.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Karl Lashley called the physical basis of learning a(n):

A) amyloid.
B) engram.
C) plaque.
D) synapse.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
What should be the usual relationship between the conditioned stimulus and the unconditioned stimulus in classical conditioning?

A) The conditioned stimulus should be presented first.
B) The unconditioned stimulus should be presented first.
C) They should be presented simultaneously.
D) It depends on what each stimulus is.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Pavlov believed that classical conditioning reflected a strengthened connection between two brain areas that were activated by:

A) reinforcement and punishment.
B) the response and a consequence.
C) the UCS and UCR.
D) the CS and UCS.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
In operant conditioning, punishment is:

A) a stimulus that produces a reflexive response.
B) an event that decreases the future probability of a response.
C) an event that increases the future probability of a response.
D) an event that prevents a response.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Lashley found that a deep cut in a rat's cerebral cortex completely eliminated the effects of learning under what circumstances, if any?

A) if the cut was made after the learning
B) if the learned task was simple
C) if the learned task was complex
D) under none of the circumstances he studied
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
After LTP is established, NMDA receptors are not required to maintain it.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
In Pavlov's experiments, he presented a sound followed by meat. Gradually the sound came to elicit salivation. The meat in this experiment was the:

A) unconditioned stimulus.
B) unconditioned response.
C) conditioned stimulus.
D) conditioned response.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
In his search for the engram, Lashley was testing:

A) Pavlov's view of classical conditioning.
B) Skinner's view of operant conditioning.
C) Garcia's view of taste aversion learning.
D) Bandura's view of social learning.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Habituation is a decrease in response to a stimulus that is presented repeatedly and accompanied by no change in other stimuli.
Unlock Deck
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
In Pavlov's experiments, he presented a sound followed by meat. Gradually the sound came to elicit salivation. The salivation to the sound in this experiment was the:

A) unconditioned stimulus.
B) unconditioned response.
C) conditioned stimulus.
D) conditioned response.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
In Pavlov's experiments he presented a sound followed by meat. Gradually the sound came to elicit salivation. The sound in this experiment would be considered the:

A) unconditioned stimulus.
B) unconditioned response.
C) conditioned stimulus.
D) conditioned response.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
Lashley's conclusions from his engram research were based on certain unnecessary assumptions, which later psychologists have discarded. One of those assumptions was that the:

A) cerebral cortex is the best or only place to search for an engram.
B) left hemisphere of the brain is simply the mirror image of the right hemisphere. .
C) physiological mechanisms of learning in rats are similar to those in humans.
D) hippocampus is more important for storage than it is for retrieval.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
The cortex works as a whole, and the more cortex the better, defines:

A) operant conditioning.
B) classical conditioning.
C) equipotentiality.
D) mass action.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Which of the following is one of the reasons that Lashley failed at finding the engram?

A) He used poor surgical methods.
B) Some memories do not depend on the cortex.
C) The engram is continually changing location in the cortex.
D) Classical conditioning had not been discovered yet.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
If the lateral interpositus nucleus is temporarily suppressed during classical conditioning of the eyeblink response, what happens?

A) After the nucleus recovers, the animal remembers the training fully.
B) Future conditioning occurs as if the animal had no previous training.
C) After the nucleus recovers, the animal learns more slowly than usual.
D) Future conditioning occurs rapidly, but the animal also forgets rapidly.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Research indicates that the red nucleus is necessary for:

A) the learning of a conditioned response.
B) the performance of a conditioned response.
C) the learning AND performance of a conditioned response.
D) suppression of the conditioned response.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Preventing learning is to ____ as suppressing a response is to ____.

A) classical conditioning; operant conditioning
B) operant conditioning; classical conditioning
C) the red nucleus; the lateral interpositus nucleus
D) the lateral interpositus nucleus; the red nucleus
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
In studies of eyelid conditioning in rabbits, Thompson and his colleagues have demonstrated that learning for this conditioned response takes place in the:

A) red nucleus of the midbrain.
B) temporal lobe of the cerebral cortex.
C) lateral interpositus nucleus of the cerebellum.
D) ventromedial nucleus of the hypothalamus.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Lashley's conclusions from his engram research were based on certain unnecessary assumptions, which later psychologists have discarded. One of those assumptions was that the:

A) brain treats all kinds of memory the same way.
B) left hemisphere of the brain is simply the mirror image of the right hemisphere.
C) physiological mechanisms of learning in rats are similar to those in humans.
D) hippocampus is more important for storage than it is for retrieval.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
While studying classical conditioning of the eyelid response in rabbits, investigators suppress the activity of the red nucleus. What results will occur?

A) That procedure will not interfere with learning.
B) Learning will not occur.
C) The response will not occur, but later testing will reveal that learning occurred.
D) The rabbit will show immediate evidence of learning, but it will forget rapidly.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Thompson identified one nucleus of the cerebellum, the ____, as essential for learning.

A) anterior nucleus
B) fastigial nucleus
C) red nucleus
D) lateral interpositus nucleus
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
Lashley found that when he removed parts of the brain:

A) only the removal of frontal lobe tissue disrupted performance.
B) only the removal of parietal lobe tissue disrupted performance.
C) the amount of tissue removed was more important than its location.
D) he found no loss of memories at all.
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52
Recent researchers have felt that Lashley's conclusions about the results of his search for the engram reflected some inappropriate assumptions. One of those assumptions was that:

A) memory involves a physical change in the nervous system.
B) that all kinds of memory are physiologically the same.
C) more than one kind of memory exists.
D) different memories involve different sets of neurons.
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53
The cerebellum's role in memories may be limited to what kind of learning or memory?

A) language learning
B) imprinting
C) classical conditioning
D) operant conditioning
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54
"All parts of the cortex contribute equally to complex behaviors such as learning" defines:

A) operant conditioning.
B) classical conditioning.
C) equipotentiality.
D) mass action.
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55
Short-term memory may be characterized as:

A) having a limited capacity.
B) having an unlimited capacity.
C) elaborative in nature.
D) rehearsal free.
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56
Which of the following is one of the reasons that Lashley failed at finding the engram?

A) He used poor surgical methods.
B) Not all memories are physiologically the same.
C) The engram is continually changing location in the cortex.
D) Classical conditioning had not been discovered yet.
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57
In studies that paired a tone with an air puff to the cornea of rabbits, learning was found to depend on one nucleus of the:

A) cerebellum.
B) hypothalamus.
C) thalamus.
D) hippocampus.
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58
A person with damage to their cerebellum may experience several problems, including:

A) poor eyesight.
B) inability to be classically conditioned.
C) weakened conditioned eye blinks.
D) exaggerated eye blinking.
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59
Recent researchers have felt that Lashley's conclusions about the results of his search for the engram reflected some inappropriate assumptions. One of those assumptions was that:

A) memory involves a physical change in the nervous system.
B) all kinds of memory are physiologically the same.
C) more than one kind of memory exists.
D) different memories change different sets of neurons.
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k this deck
60
Donald Hebb (1949) distinguished between two types of memory that he called

A) implicit and explicit.
B) declarative and procedural.
C) short-term and long-term.
D) repressed and unrepressed
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61
Studies on ____ help clarify the distinctions among different kinds of memory and enable us to explore the mechanisms of memory.

A) dementia
B) amnesia
C) epilepsy
D) stroke
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62
The delayed response task requires responding to something that you saw or heard ____.

A) in the distant past
B) a short while ago
C) right at that time
D) in a meaningful way
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63
Which brain area is active in monkeys during a delay when they have to remember the location of a light and look there only after a several-second delay?

A) cerebellum
B) the prefrontal cortex
C) the occipital lobes
D) ventromedial hypothalamus
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64
H.M. was able to learn and remember:

A) people's names.
B) how to find his way to a new residence.
C) skills like mazes and puzzles.
D) events in recent history.
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65
The general function of working memory is to:

A) hold information until it has time to get to long-term storage.
B) store memories of life events permanently.
C) attend to and operate on current information.
D) store information related to repetitious motor movements.
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66
Forgetting events prior to the time of brain damage is a characteristic of ____ amnesia.

A) retrograde
B) anterograde
C) proactive
D) procedural
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67
Compared to young adults, aging humans with poor working memory have ____ activity in the prefrontal cortex and aging humans with intact working memory have ____ activity in the prefrontal cortex.

A) decreased, decreased
B) increased, increased
C) increased, decreased
D) decreased, increased
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68
The patient H.M., who had major surgery for severe epilepsy in 1953, suffered a severe difficulty in remembering events:

A) in working memory.
B) during or after 1953.
C) long before 1953.
D) of his childhood.
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69
Which of the following drug types is most promising for treating people with failing memory?

A) Tranquilizers
B) Endorphins
C) Depressants
D) Stimulants
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70
Hebb believed that short-term memory:

A) should not be distinguished from long-term memory.
B) was a temporary holding station on the way to long-term memory.
C) was more important than long-term memory.
D) was low-level memory.
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71
According to Baddeley and Hitch, a common test of working memory is the:

A) delayed response task
B) reconsolidation task
C) consolidation task
D) working memory task
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72
After his surgery, H.M. had the most difficulty with:

A) learning new procedural tasks.
B) remembering events long before the surgery.
C) being able to define new English words.
D) IQ tests.
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73
Anterograde amnesia is to ____ as retrograde amnesia is to ____.

A) storing new memories; memories of the past
B) memories just prior to the damage; memories from childhood
C) short-term memory; long-term memory
D) emotional memories; non-emotional memories
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74
Donald Hebb distinguished between two kinds of memory because he could not imagine how a single kind of brain change could be both:

A) axonal and synaptic.
B) cognitive and muscular.
C) positive and negative.
D) quick and permanent.
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75
A peculiarity of the memory of the neurological patient H.M. was that he was able to:

A) retain new skills but not remember having learned them.
B) form new long-term memories but not short-term memories.
C) find his way to a new residence.
D) remember people's names but not which name went with which person.
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76
The patient H.M. suffered severe memory disorders following a surgical operation that removed the:

A) corpus callosum.
B) hippocampus.
C) lateral interpositus nucleus and hypothalamus.
D) prefrontal cortex and dorsomedial thalamus.
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77
One would most accurately describe H.M.'s memory problems as the inability to form:

A) short-term memories.
B) new implicit memories.
C) new episodic memories.
D) new procedural memories.
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78
Retrograde amnesia is to ____ as anterograde amnesia is to ____.

A) temporary loss of memory; permanent loss of memory
B) loss of short-term memory; loss of long-term memory
C) inability to form new memories; loss of memory for old events
D) loss of memory for old events; inability to form new memories
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79
The inability to form memories for events that happened after brain damage is a characteristic of ____ amnesia.

A) retrograde
B) anterograde
C) proactive
D) procedural
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80
Researchers proposed that all information initially entered a short-term storage, where it stayed until the brain had time to ____ it into long-term memory.

A) transpose
B) rehearse
C) consolidate
D) transfer
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 211 flashcards in this deck.