Deck 9: Memory

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Question
Which of the following objects BEST represents the function of memory?

A) A spotlight
B) A store
C) A calculator
D) A clock
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Question
What is memory for?

A) It enables us to have a relationship with our past.
B) It incorporates new information into information we encountered before.
C) It provides a sense of identity.
D) All of the above
Question
If we are able to recall something we encountered an hour earlier which of these processes must be intact?

A) Encoding and retrieval
B) Storage and retrieval
C) Retrieval only
D) Encoding, storage and retrieval must all be intact
Question
The term 'reminisce' refers to the process of dwelling on a given experience and generate some details about it.
Question
__________ of memory are common myths about human memory and represent a big obstacle for memory experts working in courtrooms.
Question
Many people think that memory is relatively __________ and that once they have experienced an event, this will remain stable in their memory.
Question
Eyewitness testimonies are usually very reliable and should provide enough evidence for convicting a defendant.
Question
Human memory can be imagined as a video camera, precisely recording the events and storing an exact copy of them.
Question
Once you have experienced an event and formed a memory, that memory will be susceptible to change.
Question
Which of the following information regarding memory is ACCURATE?

A) Amnesic patients cannot recall their own name.
B) Hypnosis is useful in helping witnesses to recall details of crimes.
C) Memory is an exact copy of what happened.
D) None of the above
Question
According to your textbook, what is the approximate proportion of people from the general public who believe that human memory records events as accurately as a video camera?

A) 30%
B) 50%
C) 60%
D) 80%
Question
Which of the following scientists was able to 'retrieve' memories by directly stimulating the human brain?

A) Loftus
B) Penfield
C) Chabris
D) Palmer
Question
Why were Penfield's observations often cited by psychologists?

A) As a proof that memory can be localized in the brain.
B) As a proof that no memory is ever lost.
C) As a proof that amnesia can be cured.
D) As a proof that working memory does not exist.
Question
What current knowledge about memory drastically challenged Penfield's view that memories are never lost?

A) Memory is a linear process.
B) Memory is divided in subcomponents.
C) Memory is an active process that involves reconstruction.
D) Memory declines over time.
Question
Which of the following adjectives does not represent memory as a process?

A) Perfect
B) Passive
C) Fragile
D) Active
Question
Which of the following adjectives does not apply to current views of human memory?

A) Perfect
B) Active
C) Variable
D) Fragile
Question
Discuss why memory cannot be compared to a videotape.
Question
What scientist suggested that memories are never lost and believed that memories could re-emerge using brain stimulation?
Question
Why was Penfield wrong suggesting that memories are never lost?
Question
Memories of strong emotional experiences are immutable and less susceptible to reconstruction.
Question
Regardless of how vivid a memory may feel, there is always a chance that it may be false.
Question
__________ refers to a memory loss.
Question
Mrs Alvarez is 30 and her family says she has very bad memory. How would you be able to diagnose her as either amnesic or suffering with dementia?

A) Consider her age, and the pattern of impaired and intact cognitive functions
B) Test whether she can remember basic information.
C) Consider whether she can remember her childhood.
D) Look at the pattern of test scores.
Question
Which amnesic patient described by Smith et al. (2010) said they could not retain information from one day to the next?

A) HM
B) FL
C) PJM
D) SS
Question
In which neurological condition is memory loss MOST likely to affect the patient's identity?

A) Multiple sclerosis
B) Fronto-temporal dementia
C) Alzheimer's disease
D) Capgras syndrome
Question
According to your textbook, who thought that memory was like a tablet of wax which could be carved into?

A) The Egyptians
B) The Greeks
C) The Romans
D) The Persians
Question
Which of the following is a type of memory?

A) Semantic memory
B) Non-declarative memory
C) Prospective memory
D) All of the above
Question
Which of the following types of memory is the memory for facts and general information?

A) Autobiographical memory
B) Episodic memory
C) Semantic memory
D) Implicit memory
Question
Which of the following types of memory is the memory for actions and events to be completed in the future?

A) Autobiographical memory
B) Episodic memory
C) Implicit memory
D) Prospective memory
Question
Sally is adding a new reminder on the smartphone. By setting a reminder, Sally is aiding her __________ memory.
Question
Non-declarative memory and procedural memory are synonymous, and they are both types of implicit memory.
Question
Autobiographical memory and episodic memory are the same construct.
Question
What type memory enables to remember to complete an action in the future?
Question
What are the three main dichotomies of human memory?
Question
Which of the following pairs does not represent a correct dichotomy of human memory?

A) Episodic memory vs semantic memory
B) Episodic memory vs non-declarative memory
C) Explicit memory vs implicit memory
D) STM vs LTM
Question
Which of the following types of memory is the LEAST associated with the others?

A) Working memory
B) Procedural memory
C) Implicit memory
D) Non-declarative memory
Question
Which of the following types of memory has less capacity compared to the others?

A) Procedural memory
B) Episodic memory
C) Working memory
D) Semantic memory
Question
While playing Trivial Pursuit, Jessica remembered that Abraham Lincoln had a history of depression. Memory of a piece of general historical knowledge is considered a _________ memory.

A) semantic
B) episodic
C) procedural
D) implicit
Question
The forgetting curve shows that a large amount of information is lost initially at a relatively fast rate, whilst over time the amount of information lost is reduced.
Question
A theory of forgetting arises from interference - the idea that old memories interfere with the acquisition of new memories.
Question
The __________ curve shows that forgetting is __________ initially and __________ over time.
Question
The forgetting curve describes the __________ of memory over time.
Question
Which two processes may explain the forgetting of information?
Question
Carlo cannot remember the title of his favourite director's last film. He can only remember the title of the film before the last one. What process of forgetting is affecting Carlo's memory?
Question
A contemporary view suggests that forgetting is a process of __________ of information in the mind.

A) removal
B) suppression
C) inhibition
D) selection
Question
The continuous and repeated presentation of one piece of information actively reduces the chances of retrieving related information. This statement describes the process of:

A) interference
B) suppression
C) selectivity
D) inhibition
Question
According to your textbook, which of the following scientists first proposed that memory could be measured by scientific means?

A) Loftus
B) Craik
C) Ebbinghaus
D) Baddeley
Question
Which of the following materials was used by Ebbinghaus to study memory?

A) Pictures of faces
B) Strings of letters
C) Lists of words
D) Lists of numbers
Question
Why did Ebbinghaus consider a string such as 'HJU' a pure measure of memory?

A) It does not have any pre-existing meaning.
B) It has never been encountered before.
C) It has very little association with anything else.
D) All of the above
Question
Pretend that you are a contestant on a new game show and that you are asked to remember the names of all the students in your kindergarten class. Every classmate that you remember correctly increases your monetary prize. The host asks you to write down the names of every student you remember. This is an example of a _______ memory task.

A) Recognition
B) Recall
C) Episodic
D) Working
Question
Why are recognition tasks easier than recall tasks?

A) Recognition tasks involve more retrieval cues than recall tasks.
B) Recall tasks involve more retrieval cues than recognition tasks.
C) Recall tasks involve more encoding than recognition tasks.
D) Recognition involves explicit memory, whereas recall involves implicit memory.
Question
Multiple choice test formats require the use of recognition memory.
Question
According to Craik's environmental support framework, which memory task is more dependent on environmental support?
Question
With reference to the Craik's environmental support framework, which of the following sequences of tasks correctly identifies the environmental support on the task from high to low?

A) free recall - recognition - cued recall - implicit memory
B) free recall - cued recall - recognition - implicit memory
C) implicit memory - recognition - cued recall - free recall
D) implicit memory - free recall - recognition - cued recall
Question
The 'old-new' is a type of:

A) free recall test
B) recognition test
C) stem-cued recall test
D) implicit memory test
Question
The famous experiment on context-dependent memory by Godden and Baddeley (1975) was carried out on:

A) Musicians
B) Students
C) Amnesic patients
D) Deep-sea divers
Question
In Godden and Baddely (1975) experiment, what was the contextual cue that affected results?

A) The water
B) Being underwater
C) The scuba diver
D) The flashing light
Question
What is the three-stage memory temporal sequence?
Question
According to the three-stage memory model, you can never recall something without having first encoded it.
Question
The multistore model proposes that memory is organized around different stores according to the capacity of storage.
Question
What are the three stages in the multistore model?
Question
According to the multistore model, what store is brief, low-level and the most fragile?
Question
Which of the following is not a store in the multistore model?

A) STM
B) Sensory memory
C) Central executive
D) LTM
Question
Information may last for _______ seconds in sensory memory.

A) several
B) a few
C) about 30
D) about 50
Question
_______ or consciously repeating information increases the likelihood of information being passed into long-term memory.
Question
According to your textbook, the memory deficit in Alzheimer's disease is:

A) greater for STM than for LTM
B) greater for LTM than for STM
C) equally bad for STM and LTM
D) only relevant for working memory
Question
Holding information in STM will always guarantee that the information will be learned and stored in LTM.
Question
One of the biggest critiques to the multistore model is that memory process does not always proceed __________ and it is common for neurological patients to have intact STM but impaired __________.
Question
Warrington and Shallice (1969) described the case of KF who showed impaired __________ but typical __________.

A) STM; LTM
B) LTM; STM
C) memory; learning
D) learning; memory
Question
The levels of processing framework thinks of memory as a(n):

A) storage
B) network
C) process
D) stream
Question
What is the 'levels of processing effect'?
Question
According to the levels of processing model, what it really matters in order to remember something is:

A) how many times you repeat that information.
B) your mental state during processing.
C) the type of processing of that information.
D) your affective state during encoding.
Question
In __________ memory people are not deliberately asked to remember material.

A) sudden
B) fast
C) incidental
D) accidental
Question
Most eyewitness situations involve:

A) Semantic memory
B) Incidental memory
C) Prospective memory
D) Procedural memory
Question
Which of the following statements regarding memory is the most accurate?

A) Memory quickly switch on when we are required to memorize an important piece of information.
B) Memory is silent most of the time in order to save mental resources for other cognitive processes.
C) Memory is always a linear process.
D) Memory is permanently switched on.
Question
According to the self-reference effect, which birthday dates are you most likely to remember?

A) Those of your loved ones.
B) Those that are far from your own birthday.
C) Those that are closer to your own birthday.
D) Those associated to important events of your life.
Question
With reference to your textbook, which condition is associated with reduced self-reference effect?

A) Alzheimer's disease
B) Amnesia
C) Autism
D) Down's syndrome
Question
Describe the survival processing effect and provide an example of a famous experiment.
Question
According to the multistore model of memory, ________is the first stage in which an image is retained by the brain for less than 1 second.
Question
How can information be retained in STM?
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Deck 9: Memory
1
Which of the following objects BEST represents the function of memory?

A) A spotlight
B) A store
C) A calculator
D) A clock
B
2
What is memory for?

A) It enables us to have a relationship with our past.
B) It incorporates new information into information we encountered before.
C) It provides a sense of identity.
D) All of the above
D
3
If we are able to recall something we encountered an hour earlier which of these processes must be intact?

A) Encoding and retrieval
B) Storage and retrieval
C) Retrieval only
D) Encoding, storage and retrieval must all be intact
D
4
The term 'reminisce' refers to the process of dwelling on a given experience and generate some details about it.
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5
__________ of memory are common myths about human memory and represent a big obstacle for memory experts working in courtrooms.
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6
Many people think that memory is relatively __________ and that once they have experienced an event, this will remain stable in their memory.
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7
Eyewitness testimonies are usually very reliable and should provide enough evidence for convicting a defendant.
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k this deck
8
Human memory can be imagined as a video camera, precisely recording the events and storing an exact copy of them.
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k this deck
9
Once you have experienced an event and formed a memory, that memory will be susceptible to change.
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k this deck
10
Which of the following information regarding memory is ACCURATE?

A) Amnesic patients cannot recall their own name.
B) Hypnosis is useful in helping witnesses to recall details of crimes.
C) Memory is an exact copy of what happened.
D) None of the above
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
11
According to your textbook, what is the approximate proportion of people from the general public who believe that human memory records events as accurately as a video camera?

A) 30%
B) 50%
C) 60%
D) 80%
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
12
Which of the following scientists was able to 'retrieve' memories by directly stimulating the human brain?

A) Loftus
B) Penfield
C) Chabris
D) Palmer
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Why were Penfield's observations often cited by psychologists?

A) As a proof that memory can be localized in the brain.
B) As a proof that no memory is ever lost.
C) As a proof that amnesia can be cured.
D) As a proof that working memory does not exist.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
What current knowledge about memory drastically challenged Penfield's view that memories are never lost?

A) Memory is a linear process.
B) Memory is divided in subcomponents.
C) Memory is an active process that involves reconstruction.
D) Memory declines over time.
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which of the following adjectives does not represent memory as a process?

A) Perfect
B) Passive
C) Fragile
D) Active
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k this deck
16
Which of the following adjectives does not apply to current views of human memory?

A) Perfect
B) Active
C) Variable
D) Fragile
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k this deck
17
Discuss why memory cannot be compared to a videotape.
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18
What scientist suggested that memories are never lost and believed that memories could re-emerge using brain stimulation?
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k this deck
19
Why was Penfield wrong suggesting that memories are never lost?
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20
Memories of strong emotional experiences are immutable and less susceptible to reconstruction.
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k this deck
21
Regardless of how vivid a memory may feel, there is always a chance that it may be false.
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k this deck
22
__________ refers to a memory loss.
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k this deck
23
Mrs Alvarez is 30 and her family says she has very bad memory. How would you be able to diagnose her as either amnesic or suffering with dementia?

A) Consider her age, and the pattern of impaired and intact cognitive functions
B) Test whether she can remember basic information.
C) Consider whether she can remember her childhood.
D) Look at the pattern of test scores.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which amnesic patient described by Smith et al. (2010) said they could not retain information from one day to the next?

A) HM
B) FL
C) PJM
D) SS
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
In which neurological condition is memory loss MOST likely to affect the patient's identity?

A) Multiple sclerosis
B) Fronto-temporal dementia
C) Alzheimer's disease
D) Capgras syndrome
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
According to your textbook, who thought that memory was like a tablet of wax which could be carved into?

A) The Egyptians
B) The Greeks
C) The Romans
D) The Persians
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k this deck
27
Which of the following is a type of memory?

A) Semantic memory
B) Non-declarative memory
C) Prospective memory
D) All of the above
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k this deck
28
Which of the following types of memory is the memory for facts and general information?

A) Autobiographical memory
B) Episodic memory
C) Semantic memory
D) Implicit memory
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k this deck
29
Which of the following types of memory is the memory for actions and events to be completed in the future?

A) Autobiographical memory
B) Episodic memory
C) Implicit memory
D) Prospective memory
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30
Sally is adding a new reminder on the smartphone. By setting a reminder, Sally is aiding her __________ memory.
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k this deck
31
Non-declarative memory and procedural memory are synonymous, and they are both types of implicit memory.
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k this deck
32
Autobiographical memory and episodic memory are the same construct.
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k this deck
33
What type memory enables to remember to complete an action in the future?
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k this deck
34
What are the three main dichotomies of human memory?
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k this deck
35
Which of the following pairs does not represent a correct dichotomy of human memory?

A) Episodic memory vs semantic memory
B) Episodic memory vs non-declarative memory
C) Explicit memory vs implicit memory
D) STM vs LTM
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k this deck
36
Which of the following types of memory is the LEAST associated with the others?

A) Working memory
B) Procedural memory
C) Implicit memory
D) Non-declarative memory
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k this deck
37
Which of the following types of memory has less capacity compared to the others?

A) Procedural memory
B) Episodic memory
C) Working memory
D) Semantic memory
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k this deck
38
While playing Trivial Pursuit, Jessica remembered that Abraham Lincoln had a history of depression. Memory of a piece of general historical knowledge is considered a _________ memory.

A) semantic
B) episodic
C) procedural
D) implicit
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k this deck
39
The forgetting curve shows that a large amount of information is lost initially at a relatively fast rate, whilst over time the amount of information lost is reduced.
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k this deck
40
A theory of forgetting arises from interference - the idea that old memories interfere with the acquisition of new memories.
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k this deck
41
The __________ curve shows that forgetting is __________ initially and __________ over time.
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k this deck
42
The forgetting curve describes the __________ of memory over time.
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k this deck
43
Which two processes may explain the forgetting of information?
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k this deck
44
Carlo cannot remember the title of his favourite director's last film. He can only remember the title of the film before the last one. What process of forgetting is affecting Carlo's memory?
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k this deck
45
A contemporary view suggests that forgetting is a process of __________ of information in the mind.

A) removal
B) suppression
C) inhibition
D) selection
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
The continuous and repeated presentation of one piece of information actively reduces the chances of retrieving related information. This statement describes the process of:

A) interference
B) suppression
C) selectivity
D) inhibition
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
According to your textbook, which of the following scientists first proposed that memory could be measured by scientific means?

A) Loftus
B) Craik
C) Ebbinghaus
D) Baddeley
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Which of the following materials was used by Ebbinghaus to study memory?

A) Pictures of faces
B) Strings of letters
C) Lists of words
D) Lists of numbers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Why did Ebbinghaus consider a string such as 'HJU' a pure measure of memory?

A) It does not have any pre-existing meaning.
B) It has never been encountered before.
C) It has very little association with anything else.
D) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Pretend that you are a contestant on a new game show and that you are asked to remember the names of all the students in your kindergarten class. Every classmate that you remember correctly increases your monetary prize. The host asks you to write down the names of every student you remember. This is an example of a _______ memory task.

A) Recognition
B) Recall
C) Episodic
D) Working
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k this deck
51
Why are recognition tasks easier than recall tasks?

A) Recognition tasks involve more retrieval cues than recall tasks.
B) Recall tasks involve more retrieval cues than recognition tasks.
C) Recall tasks involve more encoding than recognition tasks.
D) Recognition involves explicit memory, whereas recall involves implicit memory.
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k this deck
52
Multiple choice test formats require the use of recognition memory.
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k this deck
53
According to Craik's environmental support framework, which memory task is more dependent on environmental support?
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54
With reference to the Craik's environmental support framework, which of the following sequences of tasks correctly identifies the environmental support on the task from high to low?

A) free recall - recognition - cued recall - implicit memory
B) free recall - cued recall - recognition - implicit memory
C) implicit memory - recognition - cued recall - free recall
D) implicit memory - free recall - recognition - cued recall
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55
The 'old-new' is a type of:

A) free recall test
B) recognition test
C) stem-cued recall test
D) implicit memory test
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
The famous experiment on context-dependent memory by Godden and Baddeley (1975) was carried out on:

A) Musicians
B) Students
C) Amnesic patients
D) Deep-sea divers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
In Godden and Baddely (1975) experiment, what was the contextual cue that affected results?

A) The water
B) Being underwater
C) The scuba diver
D) The flashing light
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
58
What is the three-stage memory temporal sequence?
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k this deck
59
According to the three-stage memory model, you can never recall something without having first encoded it.
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k this deck
60
The multistore model proposes that memory is organized around different stores according to the capacity of storage.
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61
What are the three stages in the multistore model?
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k this deck
62
According to the multistore model, what store is brief, low-level and the most fragile?
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k this deck
63
Which of the following is not a store in the multistore model?

A) STM
B) Sensory memory
C) Central executive
D) LTM
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k this deck
64
Information may last for _______ seconds in sensory memory.

A) several
B) a few
C) about 30
D) about 50
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k this deck
65
_______ or consciously repeating information increases the likelihood of information being passed into long-term memory.
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
According to your textbook, the memory deficit in Alzheimer's disease is:

A) greater for STM than for LTM
B) greater for LTM than for STM
C) equally bad for STM and LTM
D) only relevant for working memory
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Holding information in STM will always guarantee that the information will be learned and stored in LTM.
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k this deck
68
One of the biggest critiques to the multistore model is that memory process does not always proceed __________ and it is common for neurological patients to have intact STM but impaired __________.
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Unlock for access to all 144 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
69
Warrington and Shallice (1969) described the case of KF who showed impaired __________ but typical __________.

A) STM; LTM
B) LTM; STM
C) memory; learning
D) learning; memory
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70
The levels of processing framework thinks of memory as a(n):

A) storage
B) network
C) process
D) stream
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71
What is the 'levels of processing effect'?
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72
According to the levels of processing model, what it really matters in order to remember something is:

A) how many times you repeat that information.
B) your mental state during processing.
C) the type of processing of that information.
D) your affective state during encoding.
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73
In __________ memory people are not deliberately asked to remember material.

A) sudden
B) fast
C) incidental
D) accidental
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74
Most eyewitness situations involve:

A) Semantic memory
B) Incidental memory
C) Prospective memory
D) Procedural memory
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75
Which of the following statements regarding memory is the most accurate?

A) Memory quickly switch on when we are required to memorize an important piece of information.
B) Memory is silent most of the time in order to save mental resources for other cognitive processes.
C) Memory is always a linear process.
D) Memory is permanently switched on.
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76
According to the self-reference effect, which birthday dates are you most likely to remember?

A) Those of your loved ones.
B) Those that are far from your own birthday.
C) Those that are closer to your own birthday.
D) Those associated to important events of your life.
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77
With reference to your textbook, which condition is associated with reduced self-reference effect?

A) Alzheimer's disease
B) Amnesia
C) Autism
D) Down's syndrome
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78
Describe the survival processing effect and provide an example of a famous experiment.
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79
According to the multistore model of memory, ________is the first stage in which an image is retained by the brain for less than 1 second.
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80
How can information be retained in STM?
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