Deck 24: Introduction to Memory

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Question
Recalling a visual scene of last month's party and holding it in working memory would be most likely to activate the

A) right frontal lobe.
B) left frontal lobe.
C) right cerebellum.
D) left cerebellum.
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Question
Damage to the ________ would most likely interfere with learning a conditioned fear response to the sight of a dog that had threatened you on several occasions.

A) hippocampus
B) basal ganglia
C) hypothalamus
D) cerebellum
Question
Damage to the ________ would most likely interfere with a person's ability to form new memories of a family vacation trip.

A) basal ganglia
B) hippocampus
C) cerebellum
D) amygdala
Question
Semantic memory is best described as ________ memory of ________.

A) explicit;personally experienced events
B) implicit;personally experienced events
C) explicit;facts and general knowledge
D) implicit;facts and general knowledge
Question
Memories of newly learned ________ are most likely to be disrupted by damage to the right hippocampus.Memories of newly learned ________ are most likely to be disrupted by damage to the left hippocampus.

A) body coordination skills;classically conditioned fears
B) classically conditioned fears;body coordination skills
C) words;visual designs
D) visual designs;words
Question
Following partial recovery from a severe stroke,Mr.Yanagita has learned how to ride a horse.However,he cannot consciously remember that he has learned to do this.It is likely that he has suffered damage to his

A) cerebellum.
B) hypothalamus.
C) hippocampus.
D) basal ganglia.
Question
The human capacity for storing long-term memories is

A) essentially limitless.
B) roughly equal to seven units of information.
C) typically much greater in young children than in adults.
D) greatly reduced after people reach the age of 65.
Question
The hippocampus helps process ________ memories for long-term storage.

A) procedural
B) explicit
C) automatic
D) implicit
Question
Explicit memory of personally experienced events is known as

A) context-dependent memory.
B) procedural memory.
C) semantic memory.
D) episodic memory.
Question
The hippocampus and brain cortex display simultaneous activity rhythms during sleep.This appears to be an indication of

A) priming.
B) memory consolidation.
C) the serial position effect.
D) the encoding specificity principle.
Question
A subregion within the ________ is likely to be especially active when people and mice are learning social information.

A) cerebellum
B) basal ganglia
C) hippocampus
D) amygdala
Question
The network that processes and stores explicit memories includes the

A) hippocampus and basal ganglia.
B) cerebellum and frontal lobes.
C) frontal lobes and hippocampus.
D) basal ganglia and cerebellum.
Question
Psychologist Karl Lashley found that rats retained at least a partial memory of how to navigate a maze after he

A) administered a drug to the rats that prevented LTP.
B) removed small pieces of the rats' cortex.
C) injected the rats with stress hormones.
D) deprived the rats of any opportunity to sleep.
Question
The neural storage of a long-term memory is called

A) context-dependent memory.
B) memory consolidation.
C) the serial position effect.
D) priming.
Question
Recalling your social security number and holding it in working memory would most clearly require activation of the

A) amygdala.
B) basal ganglia.
C) cerebellum.
D) left frontal lobe.
Question
Consciously recalling that Abraham Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth best illustrates

A) semantic memory.
B) state-dependent memory.
C) procedural memory.
D) episodic memory.
Question
Memory consolidation is the process in which memories initially registered in the ________ are transferred for long-term storage in other regions of the brain.

A) sensory cortex
B) hippocampus
C) thalamus
D) hypothalamus
Question
Memories initially processed in the hippocampus are transferred to the ________ for long-term storage.

A) basal ganglia
B) cortex
C) cerebellum
D) amygdala
Question
The rear area of the ________,which processes spatial memory,grows bigger the longer a London cab driver has been navigating the maze of city streets.

A) thalamus
B) amygdala
C) hippocampus
D) hypothalamus
Question
The cerebellum and basal ganglia play an important role in the processing of ________ memories.

A) explicit
B) flashbulb
C) implicit
D) declarative
Question
A baseball strikes Ashley in the head and she is momentarily knocked unconscious.The physical injury,though not serious,is most likely to interfere with Ashley's

A) flashbulb memories.
B) long-term memories.
C) procedural memories.
D) very recent memories.
Question
Hotaka can vividly recall the devastating experience of barely surviving the tsunami that took the lives of many others.It is likely that the stress of that experience provoked the ________ to boost activity in the memory-forming areas of his brain.

A) hypothalamus
B) cerebellum
C) thalamus
D) amygdala
Question
Exceptionally clear memories of emotionally significant events are called

A) implicit memories.
B) flashbulb memories.
C) mood-congruent memories.
D) procedural memories.
Question
Jane was in a car accident but has no memory of events right before the accident.What is the likely reason?

A) Her working memory did not have time to consolidate the information into long-term memory.
B) Her sensory memory failed to process the information.
C) Her long-term memory has been damaged as a result of the accident.
D) Her short-term memory did not have time to transfer the information into her working memory.
Question
Long-term potentiation refers to

A) the impact of effortful processing on retention.
B) an automatic tendency to recall emotionally significant events.
C) an increase in a neuron's firing potential.
D) the process of learning something without any conscious memory of having learned it.
Question
The temporary release of serotonin has been found to ________ memory formation,and the temporary release of stress hormones has been found to ________ memory formation.

A) disrupt;facilitate
B) facilitate;disrupt
C) disrupt;disrupt
D) facilitate;facilitate
Question
Infantile amnesia involves a lack of

A) implicit memories.
B) basal ganglia.
C) explicit memories.
D) automatic processing.
Question
The receptor sites of receiving neurons have been observed to increase following

A) priming.
B) the serial position effect.
C) long-term potentiation.
D) administration of propranolol.
Question
Explicit memory is to ________ as implicit memory is to ________.

A) automatic processing;effortful processing
B) sensory memory;working memory
C) hippocampus;cerebellum
D) basal ganglia;frontal lobes
Question
Which of the following lines of evidence does NOT confirm that LTP is a physical basis for memory?

A) Drugs that block LTP have been found to interfere with learning.
B) Drugs that mimic what happens during learning have been found to increase LTP.
C) Rats given a drug that enhanced LTP learned a maze with half the usual number of mistakes.
D) Rats given a drug that blocked LTP learned a maze with few mistakes.
Question
Nonspeaking children have not learned the words that we use to index much of our explicit memory.This most clearly helps to explain the occurrence of

A) mood-congruent memory.
B) long-term potentiation.
C) flashbulb memory.
D) infantile amnesia.
Question
The amygdala boosts activity in the brain's memory-forming areas when stimulated by

A) the basal ganglia.
B) the cerebellum.
C) stress hormones.
D) propranolol.
Question
The basal ganglia would be of most importance in forming implicit memories of

A) baseball batting skills.
B) radio news stories.
C) classmates' names.
D) textbook glossary terms.
Question
The availability of glucose energy necessary for memory consolidation is most likely to be enhanced by

A) priming.
B) stress hormones.
C) propranolol.
D) the serial position effect.
Question
Which of the following provides a neural basis for learning and remembering conditioned associations?

A) the serial position effect
B) long-term potentiation
C) encoding specificity
D) priming
Question
A year and a half after directly experiencing a San Francisco earthquake,people had very accurate recall of where they had been and what they were doing at the time of the earthquake.Their recall best illustrates ________ memory.

A) implicit
B) state-dependent
C) procedural
D) flashbulb
Question
When learning occurs through classical conditioning,the sea slug,Aplysia,releases more ________ at certain synapses.

A) serotonin
B) propranolol
C) insulin
D) LTP
Question
We long remember exciting or shocking events due to activation of the limbic system's

A) hypothalamus.
B) amygdala.
C) basal ganglia.
D) cerebellum.
Question
The deep brain structure(s)involved in motor movement and the formation of our procedural memories for skills is (are)the

A) amygdala.
B) hypothalamus.
C) basal ganglia.
D) hippocampus.
Question
Judith is showing the family photo album to her children.There are tons of pictures of their family trip to Disney World and their cruise vacation.The children were ages 3 and 4 at the time of these events.Judith is disappointed when both children tell her that they do not remember either trip.Their inability to remember illustrates

A) mild cognitive impairment.
B) priming.
C) long-term potentiation.
D) infantile amnesia.
Question
Lars was feeling depressed at the time of his high school graduation.Lars is especially likely to recall his high school graduation when he is

A) depressed.
B) happy.
C) relaxed.
D) unemotional.
Question
Individuals who received ________ for 10 days following a traumatic experience subsequently showed fewer signs of a stress disorder.

A) propranolol
B) glutamate
C) LTP
D) CREB
Question
Information learned while a person is ________ is best recalled when that person is ________.

A) sad;happy
B) drunk;sober
C) angry;calm
D) drunk;drunk
Question
The often unconscious activation of particular associations in memory is called

A) procedural memory.
B) LTP.
C) priming.
D) the serial position effect.
Question
Rehearsal is to encoding as retrieval cues are to

A) long-term potentiation.
B) memory consolidation.
C) priming.
D) the serial position effect.
Question
The smell of freshly baked bread awakened in Mr.Hutz vivid memories of his early childhood.The aroma apparently acted as a powerful

A) LTP.
B) retrieval cue.
C) implicit memory.
D) memory trace.
Question
The idea that cues and contexts associated with the acquisition of a particular memory will be most effective in helping us recall that memory is known as

A) long-term potentiation.
B) the encoding specificity principle.
C) the serial position effect.
D) memory consolidation.
Question
Mood-congruent memory refers to the effect of emotional states on the process of

A) encoding.
B) storage.
C) retrieval.
D) memory consolidation.
Question
What we learn under the influence of a drug may be more easily recalled when we are once again under the influence of that same drug.This best illustrates

A) the serial position effect.
B) implicit memory.
C) state-dependent memory.
D) long-term potentiation.
Question
A stimulus linked to a specific memory is a(n)

A) memory trace.
B) implicit memory.
C) retrieval cue.
D) LTP.
Question
Context-dependent memory best illustrates that the specific location in which we learned something often provides us with effective

A) long-term potentiation.
B) implicit memories.
C) serial position effects.
D) retrieval cues.
Question
One approach to improving memory involves the administration of drugs that boost the LTP-enhancing neurotransmitter

A) glutamate.
B) propranolol.
C) GABA.
D) epinephrine.
Question
In one study,when teens were down,they rated their parents as cruel;when they were up,their parents were angels.This best illustrates

A) implicit memory.
B) infantile amnesia.
C) the serial position effect.
D) mood-congruent memory.
Question
Effective retrieval cues trigger the process known as

A) LTP.
B) memory consolidation.
C) the serial position effect.
D) priming.
Question
Shortly after you see a missing-child poster you are more likely to interpret an ambiguous adult-child interaction as a possible kidnapping.This best illustrates the impact of

A) priming.
B) long-term potentiation.
C) infantile amnesia.
D) state-dependent memory.
Question
Professor Schmidt has participants play violent video games and then perform a word-completion task.In this task,participants have to complete each word with its missing letter.In all cases,the missing letter could form a word related to aggression.Professor Schmidt hypothesizes that playing violent video games is associated with aggressive behavior.More than likely he believes this relationship is related to

A) mild cognitive impairment.
B) priming.
C) long-term potentiation.
D) infantile amnesia.
Question
Julie most accurately recalls information learned in her history classroom when her recall is tested in the very same classroom.This best illustrates

A) the serial position effect.
B) the encoding specificity principle.
C) memory consolidation.
D) flashbulb memory.
Question
The serial position effect refers to the tendency to recall best the ________ items in a list.

A) first
B) first and last
C) middle
D) middle and last
Question
Reading a romantic novel caused Consuela to recall some past experiences with a high school boyfriend.The effect of the novel on Consuela's memory retrieval is an illustration of

A) priming.
B) memory consolidation.
C) automatic processing.
D) the serial position effect.
Question
Words heard underwater are later better recalled underwater than on land.This best illustrates

A) automatic processing.
B) flashbulb memory.
C) the serial position effect.
D) context-dependent memory.
Question
Memories of emotionally stressful events are likely to be strong due to activation of the

A) basal ganglia.
B) amygdala.
C) cerebellum.
D) hypothalamus.
Question
At a block party,Cyndi is introduced to eight new neighbors.Moments later,she remembers only the names of the first three and last two neighbors.Her experience best illustrates

A) state-dependent memory.
B) context-dependent memory.
C) implicit memory.
D) the serial position effect.
Question
Which of the following is involved in the formation of explicit memories?

A) cerebellum
B) frontal lobes
C) basal ganglia
D) amygdala
Question
Whenever Valerie experiences intense feelings of fear,she is overwhelmed with childhood memories of her abusive parents.Valerie's experience best illustrates

A) memory consolidation.
B) mood-congruent memory.
C) implicit memory.
D) the serial position effect.
Question
Episodic memory is best described as ________ memory of _________.

A) implicit;facts and general knowledge
B) implicit;personally experienced events
C) explicit;facts and general knowledge
D) explicit;personally experienced events
Question
Activating memories of your childhood by forming vivid mental images of various locations in your childhood home best illustrates

A) automatic processing.
B) a primacy effect.
C) the serial position effect.
D) priming.
Question
An inability to form semantic memories would most likely result from damage to the

A) basal ganglia.
B) hypothalamus.
C) cerebellum.
D) hippocampus.
Question
Which type of memory has an essentially limitless capacity?

A) working memory
B) short-term memory
C) long-term memory
D) flashbulb memory
Question
Which of the following is believed to be the synaptic basis for learning and memory?

A) priming
B) the primacy effect
C) encoding specificity
D) long-term potentiation
Question
Many people can easily recall exactly what they were doing when they first learned of the death of a close friend or family member.This best illustrates ________ memory.

A) iconic
B) flashbulb
C) implicit
D) state-dependent
Question
Eyewitnesses to a crime often recall the details of the crime most accurately when they return to the scene of the crime.This best illustrates

A) the serial position effect.
B) memory consolidation.
C) long-term potentiation.
D) the encoding specificity principle.
Question
Which of the following brain structures is central to the processing of procedural memories?

A) hippocampus
B) hypothalamus
C) basal ganglia
D) amygdala
Question
Karl Lashley trained rats to solve a maze and then removed pieces of their cortexes.He observed that storage of their maze memories

A) was restricted to their right cerebral hemispheres.
B) was restricted to their left and right frontal lobes.
C) was restricted to their left and right temporal lobes.
D) was not restricted to single,specific regions of the cortex.
Question
Explicit memory of facts and general knowledge is known as

A) episodic memory.
B) state-dependent memory.
C) semantic memory.
D) procedural memory.
Question
On the phone,Dominic rattles off a list of 10 grocery items for Kyoko to bring home from the store.Immediately after hearing the list,Kyoko attempts to write down the items.She is most likely to forget the items

A) at the beginning of the list.
B) at the end of the list.
C) in the middle of the list.
D) at the beginning and in the middle of the list.
Question
Damage to the hippocampus would be most likely to interfere with a person's ability to develop

A) procedural memories.
B) episodic memories.
C) implicit memories.
D) classically conditioned associations.
Question
Your relative success in recalling a dozen different names a week after you heard them listed in order is likely to illustrate

A) implicit memory.
B) a recency effect.
C) flashbulb memory.
D) a primacy effect.
Question
Research on the storage of memory indicates that

A) our brains can store new memories only if they discard some old memories.
B) our capacity for storing information in our short-term working memory has no real limit.
C) our brains distribute the components of a memory across a network of locations.
D) once memories are consolidated in storage,they can never be forgotten.
Question
The happier Judie is,the more readily she recalls positive life experiences.This best illustrates that emotional states can become

A) retrieval cues.
B) a primacy effect.
C) procedural memories.
D) flashbulb memories.
Question
Damage to the cerebellum would be most likely to interfere with a person's ability to develop

A) semantic memories.
B) episodic memories.
C) flashbulb memories.
D) classically conditioned associations.
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Deck 24: Introduction to Memory
1
Recalling a visual scene of last month's party and holding it in working memory would be most likely to activate the

A) right frontal lobe.
B) left frontal lobe.
C) right cerebellum.
D) left cerebellum.
A
2
Damage to the ________ would most likely interfere with learning a conditioned fear response to the sight of a dog that had threatened you on several occasions.

A) hippocampus
B) basal ganglia
C) hypothalamus
D) cerebellum
D
3
Damage to the ________ would most likely interfere with a person's ability to form new memories of a family vacation trip.

A) basal ganglia
B) hippocampus
C) cerebellum
D) amygdala
B
4
Semantic memory is best described as ________ memory of ________.

A) explicit;personally experienced events
B) implicit;personally experienced events
C) explicit;facts and general knowledge
D) implicit;facts and general knowledge
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
Memories of newly learned ________ are most likely to be disrupted by damage to the right hippocampus.Memories of newly learned ________ are most likely to be disrupted by damage to the left hippocampus.

A) body coordination skills;classically conditioned fears
B) classically conditioned fears;body coordination skills
C) words;visual designs
D) visual designs;words
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Following partial recovery from a severe stroke,Mr.Yanagita has learned how to ride a horse.However,he cannot consciously remember that he has learned to do this.It is likely that he has suffered damage to his

A) cerebellum.
B) hypothalamus.
C) hippocampus.
D) basal ganglia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The human capacity for storing long-term memories is

A) essentially limitless.
B) roughly equal to seven units of information.
C) typically much greater in young children than in adults.
D) greatly reduced after people reach the age of 65.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
The hippocampus helps process ________ memories for long-term storage.

A) procedural
B) explicit
C) automatic
D) implicit
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Explicit memory of personally experienced events is known as

A) context-dependent memory.
B) procedural memory.
C) semantic memory.
D) episodic memory.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
The hippocampus and brain cortex display simultaneous activity rhythms during sleep.This appears to be an indication of

A) priming.
B) memory consolidation.
C) the serial position effect.
D) the encoding specificity principle.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
A subregion within the ________ is likely to be especially active when people and mice are learning social information.

A) cerebellum
B) basal ganglia
C) hippocampus
D) amygdala
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The network that processes and stores explicit memories includes the

A) hippocampus and basal ganglia.
B) cerebellum and frontal lobes.
C) frontal lobes and hippocampus.
D) basal ganglia and cerebellum.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Psychologist Karl Lashley found that rats retained at least a partial memory of how to navigate a maze after he

A) administered a drug to the rats that prevented LTP.
B) removed small pieces of the rats' cortex.
C) injected the rats with stress hormones.
D) deprived the rats of any opportunity to sleep.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
The neural storage of a long-term memory is called

A) context-dependent memory.
B) memory consolidation.
C) the serial position effect.
D) priming.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Recalling your social security number and holding it in working memory would most clearly require activation of the

A) amygdala.
B) basal ganglia.
C) cerebellum.
D) left frontal lobe.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Consciously recalling that Abraham Lincoln was assassinated by John Wilkes Booth best illustrates

A) semantic memory.
B) state-dependent memory.
C) procedural memory.
D) episodic memory.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Memory consolidation is the process in which memories initially registered in the ________ are transferred for long-term storage in other regions of the brain.

A) sensory cortex
B) hippocampus
C) thalamus
D) hypothalamus
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Memories initially processed in the hippocampus are transferred to the ________ for long-term storage.

A) basal ganglia
B) cortex
C) cerebellum
D) amygdala
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
The rear area of the ________,which processes spatial memory,grows bigger the longer a London cab driver has been navigating the maze of city streets.

A) thalamus
B) amygdala
C) hippocampus
D) hypothalamus
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
The cerebellum and basal ganglia play an important role in the processing of ________ memories.

A) explicit
B) flashbulb
C) implicit
D) declarative
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
A baseball strikes Ashley in the head and she is momentarily knocked unconscious.The physical injury,though not serious,is most likely to interfere with Ashley's

A) flashbulb memories.
B) long-term memories.
C) procedural memories.
D) very recent memories.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Hotaka can vividly recall the devastating experience of barely surviving the tsunami that took the lives of many others.It is likely that the stress of that experience provoked the ________ to boost activity in the memory-forming areas of his brain.

A) hypothalamus
B) cerebellum
C) thalamus
D) amygdala
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Exceptionally clear memories of emotionally significant events are called

A) implicit memories.
B) flashbulb memories.
C) mood-congruent memories.
D) procedural memories.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Jane was in a car accident but has no memory of events right before the accident.What is the likely reason?

A) Her working memory did not have time to consolidate the information into long-term memory.
B) Her sensory memory failed to process the information.
C) Her long-term memory has been damaged as a result of the accident.
D) Her short-term memory did not have time to transfer the information into her working memory.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Long-term potentiation refers to

A) the impact of effortful processing on retention.
B) an automatic tendency to recall emotionally significant events.
C) an increase in a neuron's firing potential.
D) the process of learning something without any conscious memory of having learned it.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
The temporary release of serotonin has been found to ________ memory formation,and the temporary release of stress hormones has been found to ________ memory formation.

A) disrupt;facilitate
B) facilitate;disrupt
C) disrupt;disrupt
D) facilitate;facilitate
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Infantile amnesia involves a lack of

A) implicit memories.
B) basal ganglia.
C) explicit memories.
D) automatic processing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
The receptor sites of receiving neurons have been observed to increase following

A) priming.
B) the serial position effect.
C) long-term potentiation.
D) administration of propranolol.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Explicit memory is to ________ as implicit memory is to ________.

A) automatic processing;effortful processing
B) sensory memory;working memory
C) hippocampus;cerebellum
D) basal ganglia;frontal lobes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which of the following lines of evidence does NOT confirm that LTP is a physical basis for memory?

A) Drugs that block LTP have been found to interfere with learning.
B) Drugs that mimic what happens during learning have been found to increase LTP.
C) Rats given a drug that enhanced LTP learned a maze with half the usual number of mistakes.
D) Rats given a drug that blocked LTP learned a maze with few mistakes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Nonspeaking children have not learned the words that we use to index much of our explicit memory.This most clearly helps to explain the occurrence of

A) mood-congruent memory.
B) long-term potentiation.
C) flashbulb memory.
D) infantile amnesia.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
The amygdala boosts activity in the brain's memory-forming areas when stimulated by

A) the basal ganglia.
B) the cerebellum.
C) stress hormones.
D) propranolol.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The basal ganglia would be of most importance in forming implicit memories of

A) baseball batting skills.
B) radio news stories.
C) classmates' names.
D) textbook glossary terms.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
The availability of glucose energy necessary for memory consolidation is most likely to be enhanced by

A) priming.
B) stress hormones.
C) propranolol.
D) the serial position effect.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Which of the following provides a neural basis for learning and remembering conditioned associations?

A) the serial position effect
B) long-term potentiation
C) encoding specificity
D) priming
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
A year and a half after directly experiencing a San Francisco earthquake,people had very accurate recall of where they had been and what they were doing at the time of the earthquake.Their recall best illustrates ________ memory.

A) implicit
B) state-dependent
C) procedural
D) flashbulb
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
When learning occurs through classical conditioning,the sea slug,Aplysia,releases more ________ at certain synapses.

A) serotonin
B) propranolol
C) insulin
D) LTP
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
We long remember exciting or shocking events due to activation of the limbic system's

A) hypothalamus.
B) amygdala.
C) basal ganglia.
D) cerebellum.
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39
The deep brain structure(s)involved in motor movement and the formation of our procedural memories for skills is (are)the

A) amygdala.
B) hypothalamus.
C) basal ganglia.
D) hippocampus.
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40
Judith is showing the family photo album to her children.There are tons of pictures of their family trip to Disney World and their cruise vacation.The children were ages 3 and 4 at the time of these events.Judith is disappointed when both children tell her that they do not remember either trip.Their inability to remember illustrates

A) mild cognitive impairment.
B) priming.
C) long-term potentiation.
D) infantile amnesia.
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41
Lars was feeling depressed at the time of his high school graduation.Lars is especially likely to recall his high school graduation when he is

A) depressed.
B) happy.
C) relaxed.
D) unemotional.
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42
Individuals who received ________ for 10 days following a traumatic experience subsequently showed fewer signs of a stress disorder.

A) propranolol
B) glutamate
C) LTP
D) CREB
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43
Information learned while a person is ________ is best recalled when that person is ________.

A) sad;happy
B) drunk;sober
C) angry;calm
D) drunk;drunk
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44
The often unconscious activation of particular associations in memory is called

A) procedural memory.
B) LTP.
C) priming.
D) the serial position effect.
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45
Rehearsal is to encoding as retrieval cues are to

A) long-term potentiation.
B) memory consolidation.
C) priming.
D) the serial position effect.
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46
The smell of freshly baked bread awakened in Mr.Hutz vivid memories of his early childhood.The aroma apparently acted as a powerful

A) LTP.
B) retrieval cue.
C) implicit memory.
D) memory trace.
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47
The idea that cues and contexts associated with the acquisition of a particular memory will be most effective in helping us recall that memory is known as

A) long-term potentiation.
B) the encoding specificity principle.
C) the serial position effect.
D) memory consolidation.
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48
Mood-congruent memory refers to the effect of emotional states on the process of

A) encoding.
B) storage.
C) retrieval.
D) memory consolidation.
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49
What we learn under the influence of a drug may be more easily recalled when we are once again under the influence of that same drug.This best illustrates

A) the serial position effect.
B) implicit memory.
C) state-dependent memory.
D) long-term potentiation.
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50
A stimulus linked to a specific memory is a(n)

A) memory trace.
B) implicit memory.
C) retrieval cue.
D) LTP.
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51
Context-dependent memory best illustrates that the specific location in which we learned something often provides us with effective

A) long-term potentiation.
B) implicit memories.
C) serial position effects.
D) retrieval cues.
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52
One approach to improving memory involves the administration of drugs that boost the LTP-enhancing neurotransmitter

A) glutamate.
B) propranolol.
C) GABA.
D) epinephrine.
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53
In one study,when teens were down,they rated their parents as cruel;when they were up,their parents were angels.This best illustrates

A) implicit memory.
B) infantile amnesia.
C) the serial position effect.
D) mood-congruent memory.
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k this deck
54
Effective retrieval cues trigger the process known as

A) LTP.
B) memory consolidation.
C) the serial position effect.
D) priming.
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55
Shortly after you see a missing-child poster you are more likely to interpret an ambiguous adult-child interaction as a possible kidnapping.This best illustrates the impact of

A) priming.
B) long-term potentiation.
C) infantile amnesia.
D) state-dependent memory.
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56
Professor Schmidt has participants play violent video games and then perform a word-completion task.In this task,participants have to complete each word with its missing letter.In all cases,the missing letter could form a word related to aggression.Professor Schmidt hypothesizes that playing violent video games is associated with aggressive behavior.More than likely he believes this relationship is related to

A) mild cognitive impairment.
B) priming.
C) long-term potentiation.
D) infantile amnesia.
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k this deck
57
Julie most accurately recalls information learned in her history classroom when her recall is tested in the very same classroom.This best illustrates

A) the serial position effect.
B) the encoding specificity principle.
C) memory consolidation.
D) flashbulb memory.
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k this deck
58
The serial position effect refers to the tendency to recall best the ________ items in a list.

A) first
B) first and last
C) middle
D) middle and last
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59
Reading a romantic novel caused Consuela to recall some past experiences with a high school boyfriend.The effect of the novel on Consuela's memory retrieval is an illustration of

A) priming.
B) memory consolidation.
C) automatic processing.
D) the serial position effect.
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k this deck
60
Words heard underwater are later better recalled underwater than on land.This best illustrates

A) automatic processing.
B) flashbulb memory.
C) the serial position effect.
D) context-dependent memory.
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k this deck
61
Memories of emotionally stressful events are likely to be strong due to activation of the

A) basal ganglia.
B) amygdala.
C) cerebellum.
D) hypothalamus.
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k this deck
62
At a block party,Cyndi is introduced to eight new neighbors.Moments later,she remembers only the names of the first three and last two neighbors.Her experience best illustrates

A) state-dependent memory.
B) context-dependent memory.
C) implicit memory.
D) the serial position effect.
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63
Which of the following is involved in the formation of explicit memories?

A) cerebellum
B) frontal lobes
C) basal ganglia
D) amygdala
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64
Whenever Valerie experiences intense feelings of fear,she is overwhelmed with childhood memories of her abusive parents.Valerie's experience best illustrates

A) memory consolidation.
B) mood-congruent memory.
C) implicit memory.
D) the serial position effect.
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65
Episodic memory is best described as ________ memory of _________.

A) implicit;facts and general knowledge
B) implicit;personally experienced events
C) explicit;facts and general knowledge
D) explicit;personally experienced events
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66
Activating memories of your childhood by forming vivid mental images of various locations in your childhood home best illustrates

A) automatic processing.
B) a primacy effect.
C) the serial position effect.
D) priming.
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k this deck
67
An inability to form semantic memories would most likely result from damage to the

A) basal ganglia.
B) hypothalamus.
C) cerebellum.
D) hippocampus.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
Which type of memory has an essentially limitless capacity?

A) working memory
B) short-term memory
C) long-term memory
D) flashbulb memory
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69
Which of the following is believed to be the synaptic basis for learning and memory?

A) priming
B) the primacy effect
C) encoding specificity
D) long-term potentiation
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k this deck
70
Many people can easily recall exactly what they were doing when they first learned of the death of a close friend or family member.This best illustrates ________ memory.

A) iconic
B) flashbulb
C) implicit
D) state-dependent
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71
Eyewitnesses to a crime often recall the details of the crime most accurately when they return to the scene of the crime.This best illustrates

A) the serial position effect.
B) memory consolidation.
C) long-term potentiation.
D) the encoding specificity principle.
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Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
Which of the following brain structures is central to the processing of procedural memories?

A) hippocampus
B) hypothalamus
C) basal ganglia
D) amygdala
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73
Karl Lashley trained rats to solve a maze and then removed pieces of their cortexes.He observed that storage of their maze memories

A) was restricted to their right cerebral hemispheres.
B) was restricted to their left and right frontal lobes.
C) was restricted to their left and right temporal lobes.
D) was not restricted to single,specific regions of the cortex.
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k this deck
74
Explicit memory of facts and general knowledge is known as

A) episodic memory.
B) state-dependent memory.
C) semantic memory.
D) procedural memory.
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k this deck
75
On the phone,Dominic rattles off a list of 10 grocery items for Kyoko to bring home from the store.Immediately after hearing the list,Kyoko attempts to write down the items.She is most likely to forget the items

A) at the beginning of the list.
B) at the end of the list.
C) in the middle of the list.
D) at the beginning and in the middle of the list.
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k this deck
76
Damage to the hippocampus would be most likely to interfere with a person's ability to develop

A) procedural memories.
B) episodic memories.
C) implicit memories.
D) classically conditioned associations.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
Your relative success in recalling a dozen different names a week after you heard them listed in order is likely to illustrate

A) implicit memory.
B) a recency effect.
C) flashbulb memory.
D) a primacy effect.
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Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
Research on the storage of memory indicates that

A) our brains can store new memories only if they discard some old memories.
B) our capacity for storing information in our short-term working memory has no real limit.
C) our brains distribute the components of a memory across a network of locations.
D) once memories are consolidated in storage,they can never be forgotten.
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79
The happier Judie is,the more readily she recalls positive life experiences.This best illustrates that emotional states can become

A) retrieval cues.
B) a primacy effect.
C) procedural memories.
D) flashbulb memories.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
Damage to the cerebellum would be most likely to interfere with a person's ability to develop

A) semantic memories.
B) episodic memories.
C) flashbulb memories.
D) classically conditioned associations.
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 149 flashcards in this deck.