Deck 5: Memory

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Question
Memory is:

A)a capacity for learning.
B)a system that allows people to retain information over time.
C)an ability of humans only.
D)unchangeable.
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Question
How long do the contents of the sensory store normally last?

A)less than one second
B)about four to twenty seconds
C)about five to nine minutes
D)up to a lifetime
Question
The sensory memory associated with the visual sense is called the:

A)iconic memory system.
B)echoic memory system.
C)optical memory system.
D)occipital memory system.
Question
Which memory system provides us with a very brief image of all the stimuli present at a particular moment?

A)long-term memory
B)sensory memory
C)primary memory
D)short-term memory
Question
A system that allows people to retain information over time is called:

A)memory.
B)cognition.
C)computer.
D)intelligence.
Question
What is the system or process by which the products or results of learning are stored for future use?

A)cognition
B)memory
C)perception
D)sensation
Question
Deciding what information to store and how to represent it is known as:

A)remembering.
B)decoding.
C)encoding.
D)recall.
Question
Christine has always had an unusually effective memory.She credits this to the fact that after seeing something just once,she can visualize the object in great detail,as if she was looking at a photograph of it.Christine's ability is an example of ________.

A)clairvoyance
B)eidetic imagery
C)episodic imagery
D)mnemonics
Question
A visual image held in the sensory register is _____________.

A)an icon
B)a pictograph
C)a trace
D)a symbol
Question
The step in the memory process that actually makes our memories available to us is:

A)retrieval.
B)encoding.
C)rehearsal.
D)storage.
Question
Memory is classically defined as:

A)a capacity for learning.
B)the ability retain information over time.
C)an ability of humans only.
D)unchangeable.
Question
Iconic and echoic memory are types of _______ memory.

A)working
B)sensory
C)short-term
D)long-term
Question
Students in a psychology experiment were exposed to three nonsense syllables for a very short period of time and then asked to recall them.If the instructions to recall the syllables came immediately,the students were usually successful.If the instructions came even one second after the syllables were shown,the students were much less successful.The MOST plausible explanation for this phenomenon is that,in the latter case,_____________.

A)the icon never made it to the sensory registers
B)the icon was already stored in short-term memory
C)the icon faded after being stored in short-term memory
D)the icon faded before being stored in short-term memory
Question
What are the components of the information-processing model in order?

A)retrieval,encoding,storage
B)encoding,capturing,retrieval
C)capturing,encoding,retrieval
D)encoding,storage,retrieval
Question
The auditory equivalent of the icon is the ____________.

A)echo
B)vibration
C)sound wave
D)neural trace
Question
Our visual sensation of a passing automobile would be initially stored in ___________.

A)the sensory registers
B)short-term memory
C)long-term memory
D)the hippocampus
Question
Iconic memory and echoic memory represent what many theorists call:

A)precepts.
B)imaginal systems.
C)sensory memory systems.
D)rapid retrieval systems.
Question
You looked up a friend's address for a letter you wrote.Suddenly the phone rings-wrong number.Even though you were interrupted for only a few seconds,you've forgotten the address.Which memory system failed you?

A)permanent memory
B)long-term memory
C)sensory memory
D)short-term memory
Question
Encoding is:

A)recalling information.
B)recognizing information.
C)representing information.
D)remembering information.
Question
Which of the following is NOT true of eidetic imagery?

A)It is much more common in children than in adults.
B)It seems to vary from person to person.
C)Children with eidetic imagery outperform other children on tests of memory.
D)Some people can produce eidetic images of three-dimensional objects.
Question
The process we use to notice important stimuli and ignore irrelevant ones is ______.

A)encoding
B)attention
C)masking
D)chunking
Question
What we are thinking of at any given moment,or what we commonly know as "consciousness," is ____________.

A)long-term memory
B)short-term memory
C)secondary memory
D)cognitive dissonance
Question
Information selected from sensory memory is transferred to conscious awareness or:

A)primary memory.
B)short-term memory.
C)factual memory.
D)long-term memory.
Question
Many years ago,telephone numbers had only four or five digits.Even now,no more than seven digits are used for phone numbers.The most reasonable psychological explanation for this is that ________________.

A)there is a direct relationship between the number of items in the sensory registers and their retention
B)there is an inverse relationship between the number of items in the sensory registers and their retention
C)there is a direct relationship between the number of items in short-term memory and their retention
D)there is an inverse relationship between the number of items in short-term memory and their retention
Question
What is the capacity of short-term memory?

A)five,plus or minus two letters
B)seven,plus or minus two chunks
C)five,plus or minus two engrams
D)seven,plus or minus two numbers
Question
The capacity of STM is _______ items.

A)unlimited
B)7 +or - 2
C)12
D)22
Question
Information in short-term memory is retained ________.

A)for about 60 seconds
B)as long as it is rehearsed
C)for several seconds without rehearsal
D)up to several minutes
Question
If you want to remember something for a couple of minutes,the MOST effective device is __________.

A)visual imagery
B)tactile imagery
C)rote rehearsal
D)elaborative rehearsal
Question
Students in a psychology experiment were exposed to three notes of music for a very short period of time and then asked to recall them.If the instructions to recall the notes came immediately,the students usually succeeded.If the instructions came more than three seconds after the notes were played,the students were much less successful.The MOST plausible explanation for this phenomenon is that,in the latter case,_____________ .

A)the echo never made it to the sensory registers
B)the echo faded after being stored in short-term memory
C)the echo was already stored in long-term memory
D)the echo faded before being stored in short-term memory
Question
Information that has been transferred out of sensory memory enters:

A)long-term.
B)short-term.
C)savings.
D)either short-term or long-term depending on the level at which it is processed.
Question
The process by which we notice stimuli selectively is called:

A)attention.
B)recognition.
C)saving.
D)recalling.
Question
Information in short-term memory is coded _______.

A)abstractly
B)visually only
C)acoustically only
D)acoustically and visually
Question
In what way are sensory memory and long-term memory similar?

A)Storage in both is essentially permanent.
B)Retrieval from both is immediate.
C)Both have a large capacity.
D)Both make exclusive use of semantic retrieval cues.
Question
Attention is the process of ________.

A)storing information
B)representing information
C)selectively noticing stimuli
D)recognizing visual sensations
Question
An echo usually stays in the sensory registers for __________.

A)1/4 of a second
B)one second
C)several seconds
D)40 seconds
Question
What is the capacity of short-term memory?

A)five,plus or minus pieces of information
B)eleven,plus or minus two chunks
C)fifteen,plus or minus two engrams
D)three,plus or minus two numbers
Question
Memory span is _______ and is associated with _______ memory.

A)the duration that information is stored;short-term
B)number of items stored;long-term
C)the number of items stored;short-term
D)the duration that information is stored;long-term
Question
Verbal and visual codes are types of _______ encoding.

A)primary
B)secondary
C)short-term
D)long-term
Question
The working memory is known as the _____________ memory.

A)tertiary
B)primary
C)short-term
D)long-term
Question
Sensing is to _______ memory as rehearsal is to _______.

A)sensory store;attention
B)short-term;long-term
C)attention;short-term
D)sensory;short-term
Question
Most normal adults have a memory span:

A)of between 5 and 9 items.
B)that averages 7.
C)of 7 plus-or-minus 2.
D)all of the above.
Question
The average memory span consists of _______ items.

A)five
B)six
C)seven
D)nine
Question
An individual's semantic memory contains:

A)memories about events.
B)background knowledge about words,symbols,concepts and rules arranged as hierarchies of information in categories and subordinate categories.
C)autobiographical information about one's previous experiences.
D)the order and sequence of information from specific to general.
Question
Steve was recalling his first day in college,including walking into the wrong class,dropping his books as he left,and the long line at the registrar's office he encountered when he had to switch classes.These memories are examples of:

A)semantic memory.
B)implicit memory.
C)procedural memory.
D)episodic memory.
Question
Chunking is a means of _______________.

A)immediately forgetting irrelevant details
B)organizing information into meaningful units
C)arranging details into a hierarchy from most important to least important
D)storing long-term memories
Question
Chunking aids:

A)understanding.
B)perception.
C)retention.
D)encoding.
Question
Most people cannot store the following list of letters in short-term memory. G O T O Y O U R B E D R O O M
However,if the letters are grouped meaningfully into words,they fit short-term's memory span: Go to your bedroom.This illustrates _________.

A)chunking
B)backward masking
C)verbal coding
D)selective attention
Question
Information is grouped for storage in short-term memory through the process of __________.

A)rote rehearsal
B)cueing
C)chunking
D)categorizing
Question
Which of the following is NOT an example of long-term memory?

A)identifying a perfume as that worn by your grandmother 20 years ago
B)repeating an address after it was told to you
C)repeating a poem learned in nursery school
D)remembering how to ride a bike
Question
The state psychology association has invited teams from all the colleges in the state to compete in a Psych Bowl.The teams will answer questions such as "Who founded the first psychology laboratory?" Where is this information stored?

A)long-term memory
B)short-term memory
C)conceptual memory
D)primary memory
Question
Chunking is a means of _______.

A)immediately forgetting irrelevant details
B)organizing information into meaningful units
C)arranging details into a hierarchy from most important to least important
D)storing long-term memories
Question
Your street address,telephone number,and social security number are stored in:

A)numerical memory.
B)short-term memory.
C)long-term memory.
D)sensory memory.
Question
The type of memory that is most like an encyclopedia or a dictionary is __________.

A)emotional memory
B)episodic memory
C)procedural memory
D)semantic memory
Question
Information is grouped for storage in short-term memory through a process called _______.

A)chunking
B)categorizing
C)rehearsal
D)cueing
Question
What is the capacity of short-term memory?

A)7 bits of information
B)7 chunks of information
C)12 letters,if measured by Sperling's partial report technique
D)16 letters,if measured by Sperling's partial report technique
Question
The short-term memory capacity (digit-span)in a normal adult is about:

A)9 items.
B)7 or 8 items.
C)4 or 5 items.
D)14 or 15 items.
Question
Which of the following is an example of semantic memory?

A)events
B)concepts
C)time
D)place
Question
Memory span is a characteristic of:

A)long-term memory.
B)short-term memory.
C)sensory memory.
D)semantic memory.
Question
Why is implicit memory so difficult to study?

A)It does not operate on a conscious level.
B)It is a more recently identified type of memory.
C)It is concerned with the identification of only certain words and objects.
D)People with perfectly intact memories are often the focus of study.
Question
Which statement concerning long-term memory is TRUE?

A)Information in long-term is stored permanently.
B)Rehearsal is one of the primary methods information is moved from short-term to long-term.
C)The longer information is in short-term,the more likely it will be stored in long-term.
D)all of the above
Question
Semantic memory is organized __________.

A)in chunks
B)sequentially and chronologically
C)hierarchically
D)chronologically
Question
When Rip Van Winkle returns to his native village after 20 years of sleeping in the mountains,he goes immediately to the location of his former house and asks for his wife and children by name.The kind of memory that he is exhibiting is _______.

A)procedural memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)eidetic memory
Question
The concept of a house would be stored in _______.

A)the sensory registers
B)short-term memory
C)eidetic memory
D)long-term memory
Question
Reproducing what one has learned exactly as one learned it,is required in the ______ method of testing memory.

A)cued matching
B)savings
C)recognition
D)serial recall
Question
The portion of long-term memory that stores specific information that has personal meaning is called __________ memory.

A)emotional
B)episodic
C)semantic
D)procedural
Question
Connie lost her keys.She searches her memory for when she last had them,and goes to that place in the hope that it will help her remember where she misplaced them.Connie is ________ activating her _________.

A)unconsciously;semantic memory
B)conscious;semantic memory
C)unconsciously;episodic memory
D)consciously;episodic memory
Question
On a TV game show,Jeannette is asked to name the state capital of Vermont.This information is most likely stored in ______.

A)procedural memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)eidetic memory
Question
The process of getting information out of memory is known as:

A)retention.
B)retrieval.
C)reconstruction.
D)reliable.
Question
Our memories of general knowledge items such as the meanings of words or the dates of famous historical events are stored in _______.

A)procedural memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)eidetic memory
Question
Which of the following is an example of semantic memory?

A)events
B)concepts
C)time
D)place
Question
Your memories of personal information such as what you wore to work yesterday or what you ate for breakfast this morning are stored in _______________.

A)procedural memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)eidetic memory
Question
Information that was either unintentionally committed to or unintentionally retried from memory is known as ___________ .

A)eidetic memory
B)procedural memory
C)implicit memory
D)explicit memory
Question
"Iconic" and "echoic" are to sensory memory as "episodic," "semantic," and "procedural" are to _______ memory.

A)long-term
B)short-term
C)procedural
D)semantic
Question
Scott remembers all of the details of his wedding seven years ago.This information is most likely stored in _______ memory.

A)iconic
B)episodic
C)semantic
D)short-term
Question
Your memories of personal information such as what you wore to work yesterday,what you ate for breakfast this morning,or who your spouse is,are stored in ______.

A)procedural memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)eidetic memory
Question
Your tutor has "one last word" for you before she ends today's session.She tells you to study material in the middle of your study session a little harder.What concept from memory research is the basis of her advice?

A)serial position effect
B)state-dependent learning
C)transfer test
D)imagery
Question
Retrieval cues ______.

A)are important in helping us remember items stored in long-term memory
B)are aids in rote rehearsal in short-term memory
C)can be helpful in both long and short-term memory
D)have been recently shown to be inefficient in accessing available information in memory
Question
Last week Lisa took an abnormal psychology test and did not miss a question.However,when a guest speaker came to class a week later to talk about schizophrenia,she had trouble remembering some of the relevant class material.She remembered even less about the topic when she saw a news report on schizophrenia a month later.What memory phenomenon explains what Lisa is experiencing?

A)mirage effect
B)serial position curve
C)free recall curve
D)curve of forgetting
Question
A recognition test requires one to:

A)reproduce material when provided a cue.
B)profit from previous learning to relearn faster.
C)pick the correct answer from among several possible ones provided.
D)reproduce material without cues provided.
Question
Which type of memory is concerned with remembering the day your parents bought you a car?

A)implicit memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)procedural memory
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Deck 5: Memory
1
Memory is:

A)a capacity for learning.
B)a system that allows people to retain information over time.
C)an ability of humans only.
D)unchangeable.
a system that allows people to retain information over time.
2
How long do the contents of the sensory store normally last?

A)less than one second
B)about four to twenty seconds
C)about five to nine minutes
D)up to a lifetime
less than one second
3
The sensory memory associated with the visual sense is called the:

A)iconic memory system.
B)echoic memory system.
C)optical memory system.
D)occipital memory system.
iconic memory system.
4
Which memory system provides us with a very brief image of all the stimuli present at a particular moment?

A)long-term memory
B)sensory memory
C)primary memory
D)short-term memory
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5
A system that allows people to retain information over time is called:

A)memory.
B)cognition.
C)computer.
D)intelligence.
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6
What is the system or process by which the products or results of learning are stored for future use?

A)cognition
B)memory
C)perception
D)sensation
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7
Deciding what information to store and how to represent it is known as:

A)remembering.
B)decoding.
C)encoding.
D)recall.
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8
Christine has always had an unusually effective memory.She credits this to the fact that after seeing something just once,she can visualize the object in great detail,as if she was looking at a photograph of it.Christine's ability is an example of ________.

A)clairvoyance
B)eidetic imagery
C)episodic imagery
D)mnemonics
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9
A visual image held in the sensory register is _____________.

A)an icon
B)a pictograph
C)a trace
D)a symbol
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10
The step in the memory process that actually makes our memories available to us is:

A)retrieval.
B)encoding.
C)rehearsal.
D)storage.
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k this deck
11
Memory is classically defined as:

A)a capacity for learning.
B)the ability retain information over time.
C)an ability of humans only.
D)unchangeable.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Iconic and echoic memory are types of _______ memory.

A)working
B)sensory
C)short-term
D)long-term
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13
Students in a psychology experiment were exposed to three nonsense syllables for a very short period of time and then asked to recall them.If the instructions to recall the syllables came immediately,the students were usually successful.If the instructions came even one second after the syllables were shown,the students were much less successful.The MOST plausible explanation for this phenomenon is that,in the latter case,_____________.

A)the icon never made it to the sensory registers
B)the icon was already stored in short-term memory
C)the icon faded after being stored in short-term memory
D)the icon faded before being stored in short-term memory
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14
What are the components of the information-processing model in order?

A)retrieval,encoding,storage
B)encoding,capturing,retrieval
C)capturing,encoding,retrieval
D)encoding,storage,retrieval
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15
The auditory equivalent of the icon is the ____________.

A)echo
B)vibration
C)sound wave
D)neural trace
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16
Our visual sensation of a passing automobile would be initially stored in ___________.

A)the sensory registers
B)short-term memory
C)long-term memory
D)the hippocampus
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17
Iconic memory and echoic memory represent what many theorists call:

A)precepts.
B)imaginal systems.
C)sensory memory systems.
D)rapid retrieval systems.
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18
You looked up a friend's address for a letter you wrote.Suddenly the phone rings-wrong number.Even though you were interrupted for only a few seconds,you've forgotten the address.Which memory system failed you?

A)permanent memory
B)long-term memory
C)sensory memory
D)short-term memory
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19
Encoding is:

A)recalling information.
B)recognizing information.
C)representing information.
D)remembering information.
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20
Which of the following is NOT true of eidetic imagery?

A)It is much more common in children than in adults.
B)It seems to vary from person to person.
C)Children with eidetic imagery outperform other children on tests of memory.
D)Some people can produce eidetic images of three-dimensional objects.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
The process we use to notice important stimuli and ignore irrelevant ones is ______.

A)encoding
B)attention
C)masking
D)chunking
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22
What we are thinking of at any given moment,or what we commonly know as "consciousness," is ____________.

A)long-term memory
B)short-term memory
C)secondary memory
D)cognitive dissonance
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k this deck
23
Information selected from sensory memory is transferred to conscious awareness or:

A)primary memory.
B)short-term memory.
C)factual memory.
D)long-term memory.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Many years ago,telephone numbers had only four or five digits.Even now,no more than seven digits are used for phone numbers.The most reasonable psychological explanation for this is that ________________.

A)there is a direct relationship between the number of items in the sensory registers and their retention
B)there is an inverse relationship between the number of items in the sensory registers and their retention
C)there is a direct relationship between the number of items in short-term memory and their retention
D)there is an inverse relationship between the number of items in short-term memory and their retention
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
What is the capacity of short-term memory?

A)five,plus or minus two letters
B)seven,plus or minus two chunks
C)five,plus or minus two engrams
D)seven,plus or minus two numbers
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Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
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26
The capacity of STM is _______ items.

A)unlimited
B)7 +or - 2
C)12
D)22
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27
Information in short-term memory is retained ________.

A)for about 60 seconds
B)as long as it is rehearsed
C)for several seconds without rehearsal
D)up to several minutes
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Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
If you want to remember something for a couple of minutes,the MOST effective device is __________.

A)visual imagery
B)tactile imagery
C)rote rehearsal
D)elaborative rehearsal
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Students in a psychology experiment were exposed to three notes of music for a very short period of time and then asked to recall them.If the instructions to recall the notes came immediately,the students usually succeeded.If the instructions came more than three seconds after the notes were played,the students were much less successful.The MOST plausible explanation for this phenomenon is that,in the latter case,_____________ .

A)the echo never made it to the sensory registers
B)the echo faded after being stored in short-term memory
C)the echo was already stored in long-term memory
D)the echo faded before being stored in short-term memory
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Information that has been transferred out of sensory memory enters:

A)long-term.
B)short-term.
C)savings.
D)either short-term or long-term depending on the level at which it is processed.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
The process by which we notice stimuli selectively is called:

A)attention.
B)recognition.
C)saving.
D)recalling.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Information in short-term memory is coded _______.

A)abstractly
B)visually only
C)acoustically only
D)acoustically and visually
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
In what way are sensory memory and long-term memory similar?

A)Storage in both is essentially permanent.
B)Retrieval from both is immediate.
C)Both have a large capacity.
D)Both make exclusive use of semantic retrieval cues.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Attention is the process of ________.

A)storing information
B)representing information
C)selectively noticing stimuli
D)recognizing visual sensations
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
An echo usually stays in the sensory registers for __________.

A)1/4 of a second
B)one second
C)several seconds
D)40 seconds
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
What is the capacity of short-term memory?

A)five,plus or minus pieces of information
B)eleven,plus or minus two chunks
C)fifteen,plus or minus two engrams
D)three,plus or minus two numbers
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 108 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Memory span is _______ and is associated with _______ memory.

A)the duration that information is stored;short-term
B)number of items stored;long-term
C)the number of items stored;short-term
D)the duration that information is stored;long-term
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38
Verbal and visual codes are types of _______ encoding.

A)primary
B)secondary
C)short-term
D)long-term
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39
The working memory is known as the _____________ memory.

A)tertiary
B)primary
C)short-term
D)long-term
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40
Sensing is to _______ memory as rehearsal is to _______.

A)sensory store;attention
B)short-term;long-term
C)attention;short-term
D)sensory;short-term
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41
Most normal adults have a memory span:

A)of between 5 and 9 items.
B)that averages 7.
C)of 7 plus-or-minus 2.
D)all of the above.
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42
The average memory span consists of _______ items.

A)five
B)six
C)seven
D)nine
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43
An individual's semantic memory contains:

A)memories about events.
B)background knowledge about words,symbols,concepts and rules arranged as hierarchies of information in categories and subordinate categories.
C)autobiographical information about one's previous experiences.
D)the order and sequence of information from specific to general.
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44
Steve was recalling his first day in college,including walking into the wrong class,dropping his books as he left,and the long line at the registrar's office he encountered when he had to switch classes.These memories are examples of:

A)semantic memory.
B)implicit memory.
C)procedural memory.
D)episodic memory.
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45
Chunking is a means of _______________.

A)immediately forgetting irrelevant details
B)organizing information into meaningful units
C)arranging details into a hierarchy from most important to least important
D)storing long-term memories
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46
Chunking aids:

A)understanding.
B)perception.
C)retention.
D)encoding.
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47
Most people cannot store the following list of letters in short-term memory. G O T O Y O U R B E D R O O M
However,if the letters are grouped meaningfully into words,they fit short-term's memory span: Go to your bedroom.This illustrates _________.

A)chunking
B)backward masking
C)verbal coding
D)selective attention
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48
Information is grouped for storage in short-term memory through the process of __________.

A)rote rehearsal
B)cueing
C)chunking
D)categorizing
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49
Which of the following is NOT an example of long-term memory?

A)identifying a perfume as that worn by your grandmother 20 years ago
B)repeating an address after it was told to you
C)repeating a poem learned in nursery school
D)remembering how to ride a bike
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50
The state psychology association has invited teams from all the colleges in the state to compete in a Psych Bowl.The teams will answer questions such as "Who founded the first psychology laboratory?" Where is this information stored?

A)long-term memory
B)short-term memory
C)conceptual memory
D)primary memory
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51
Chunking is a means of _______.

A)immediately forgetting irrelevant details
B)organizing information into meaningful units
C)arranging details into a hierarchy from most important to least important
D)storing long-term memories
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52
Your street address,telephone number,and social security number are stored in:

A)numerical memory.
B)short-term memory.
C)long-term memory.
D)sensory memory.
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53
The type of memory that is most like an encyclopedia or a dictionary is __________.

A)emotional memory
B)episodic memory
C)procedural memory
D)semantic memory
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54
Information is grouped for storage in short-term memory through a process called _______.

A)chunking
B)categorizing
C)rehearsal
D)cueing
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55
What is the capacity of short-term memory?

A)7 bits of information
B)7 chunks of information
C)12 letters,if measured by Sperling's partial report technique
D)16 letters,if measured by Sperling's partial report technique
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56
The short-term memory capacity (digit-span)in a normal adult is about:

A)9 items.
B)7 or 8 items.
C)4 or 5 items.
D)14 or 15 items.
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57
Which of the following is an example of semantic memory?

A)events
B)concepts
C)time
D)place
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58
Memory span is a characteristic of:

A)long-term memory.
B)short-term memory.
C)sensory memory.
D)semantic memory.
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59
Why is implicit memory so difficult to study?

A)It does not operate on a conscious level.
B)It is a more recently identified type of memory.
C)It is concerned with the identification of only certain words and objects.
D)People with perfectly intact memories are often the focus of study.
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60
Which statement concerning long-term memory is TRUE?

A)Information in long-term is stored permanently.
B)Rehearsal is one of the primary methods information is moved from short-term to long-term.
C)The longer information is in short-term,the more likely it will be stored in long-term.
D)all of the above
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61
Semantic memory is organized __________.

A)in chunks
B)sequentially and chronologically
C)hierarchically
D)chronologically
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62
When Rip Van Winkle returns to his native village after 20 years of sleeping in the mountains,he goes immediately to the location of his former house and asks for his wife and children by name.The kind of memory that he is exhibiting is _______.

A)procedural memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)eidetic memory
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63
The concept of a house would be stored in _______.

A)the sensory registers
B)short-term memory
C)eidetic memory
D)long-term memory
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64
Reproducing what one has learned exactly as one learned it,is required in the ______ method of testing memory.

A)cued matching
B)savings
C)recognition
D)serial recall
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65
The portion of long-term memory that stores specific information that has personal meaning is called __________ memory.

A)emotional
B)episodic
C)semantic
D)procedural
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66
Connie lost her keys.She searches her memory for when she last had them,and goes to that place in the hope that it will help her remember where she misplaced them.Connie is ________ activating her _________.

A)unconsciously;semantic memory
B)conscious;semantic memory
C)unconsciously;episodic memory
D)consciously;episodic memory
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67
On a TV game show,Jeannette is asked to name the state capital of Vermont.This information is most likely stored in ______.

A)procedural memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)eidetic memory
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68
The process of getting information out of memory is known as:

A)retention.
B)retrieval.
C)reconstruction.
D)reliable.
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69
Our memories of general knowledge items such as the meanings of words or the dates of famous historical events are stored in _______.

A)procedural memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)eidetic memory
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70
Which of the following is an example of semantic memory?

A)events
B)concepts
C)time
D)place
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71
Your memories of personal information such as what you wore to work yesterday or what you ate for breakfast this morning are stored in _______________.

A)procedural memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)eidetic memory
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72
Information that was either unintentionally committed to or unintentionally retried from memory is known as ___________ .

A)eidetic memory
B)procedural memory
C)implicit memory
D)explicit memory
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73
"Iconic" and "echoic" are to sensory memory as "episodic," "semantic," and "procedural" are to _______ memory.

A)long-term
B)short-term
C)procedural
D)semantic
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74
Scott remembers all of the details of his wedding seven years ago.This information is most likely stored in _______ memory.

A)iconic
B)episodic
C)semantic
D)short-term
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75
Your memories of personal information such as what you wore to work yesterday,what you ate for breakfast this morning,or who your spouse is,are stored in ______.

A)procedural memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)eidetic memory
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76
Your tutor has "one last word" for you before she ends today's session.She tells you to study material in the middle of your study session a little harder.What concept from memory research is the basis of her advice?

A)serial position effect
B)state-dependent learning
C)transfer test
D)imagery
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77
Retrieval cues ______.

A)are important in helping us remember items stored in long-term memory
B)are aids in rote rehearsal in short-term memory
C)can be helpful in both long and short-term memory
D)have been recently shown to be inefficient in accessing available information in memory
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78
Last week Lisa took an abnormal psychology test and did not miss a question.However,when a guest speaker came to class a week later to talk about schizophrenia,she had trouble remembering some of the relevant class material.She remembered even less about the topic when she saw a news report on schizophrenia a month later.What memory phenomenon explains what Lisa is experiencing?

A)mirage effect
B)serial position curve
C)free recall curve
D)curve of forgetting
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79
A recognition test requires one to:

A)reproduce material when provided a cue.
B)profit from previous learning to relearn faster.
C)pick the correct answer from among several possible ones provided.
D)reproduce material without cues provided.
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80
Which type of memory is concerned with remembering the day your parents bought you a car?

A)implicit memory
B)semantic memory
C)episodic memory
D)procedural memory
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