Liberty
University PSYC 101 quiz 6 solutions answers right
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many versions: 5 different versions
Question 1 Recovered memories of childhood
sexual abuse are controversial because of all but which of the following
reasons?
Question 2 ______ occurs when eyewitnesses
are given incorrect data during the retention interval of memory.
Question 3 Regarding ideas about where
memories are stored, the current belief is that
Question 4 Many psychologists think of
human memory as a type of information processing system that has _____ basic
processes that are called ______.
Question 5 When children are first learning
the alphabet, they tend to be accurate on the ABCD portion and the WXYZ portion
while making lots of mistakes in between. This represents the
Question 6 When questioning eyewitnesses,
openended questions tend to _________ but tend to elicit _________.
Question 7 An organized knowledge structure
reflecting one’s past experience and future expectations is called a
Question 8 Pedro has suffered a head injury
that causes him to have no memory of the events preceding the injury. He is
suffering from
Question 9 From a biological perspective,
memories are most like which of the following?
Question 10 Regarding declarative memory,
which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 11 Which of the following
psychologists is a leading expert on eyewitness testimony?
Question 12 Cells that “fire together, wire
together.” This saying best captures the concept of
Question 13 The overall outcome of
Lashley’s search for the engram was the
Question 14 Because of an accident he suffered
last month, Jason suffers from anterograde amnesia. As a result, he may have
trouble remembering _____.
Question 15 Which question is most likely
to be associated with episodic memory?
Question 16 Flashbulb memories are most
likely to be associated with
Question 17 Strengthening synaptic
connections between neurons by repeated stimulation is known as
Question 18 Regarding research on
forgetting and decay theory, which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 19 In memory encoding, mental
picture is to _____ as meaning is to _____.
Question 20 The idea that memory gradually
disintegrates over time is the basis of
Question 1 Herman counts the number of
times it takes to rehearse a list of nonsense syllables in order to memorize
it. Then he counts the number of times it takes to relearn the list after a
month has passed. Herman then calculates the difference between the number of
times and determines the percentage gain he made between the two efforts at
memorization. Herman uses this figure as a measure of memory retention. Which
technique is Herman using?
Question 2 The _____ plays an important
role in encoding emotional experiences, such as fear responses.
Question 3 While taking her psychology
exam, Edith is certain that she knows who developed the forgetting curve. She
remembers studying it, and she can get a vague picture of where the material is
in her textbook. Edith’s certainty that she knows something, but inability to recall
it is called
Question 4 By manipulating a particular
gene in mice, scientists have been able to
Question 5 Where memory is concerned, the
hippocampus _____.
Question 6 Many psychologists think of
human memory as a type of information processing system that has _____ basic
processes that are called ______.
Question 7 Regarding research on forgetting
and decay theory, which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 8 Regarding longterm memory,
which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 9 Jessica is participating in an
experiment on memory. She has been asked to memorize a long list of word pairs.
Once she has mastered the list, she will be asked a series of questions about
which words were paired with each other. This is an example of a _____ test of
memory.
Question 10 Cells that “fire together, wire
together.” This saying best captures the concept of
Question 11 Lionel takes an exam in his
French class. He is presented a word in English and asked to list the French
equivalent. What type of memory task is Lionel completing?
Question 12 When it comes to retention, in
general,
Question 13 Procedural memory is to ______
as declarative memory is to ______.
Question 14 Regarding implicit and explicit
memory, which of the following statements is TRUE?
Question 15 According to constructionist
theory, memories of life experiences may be described by all but which of the
following?
Question 16 Grace knows how to tie a square
knot and how to drive an automobile with a standard transmission. These are
examples of
Question 17 Recovered memories of childhood
sexual abuse are controversial because of all but which of the following
reasons?
Question 18 Mark’s friends say he has a
“photographic memory.” In scientific terms, Mark’s memory ability is described
as
Question 19 Experts suggest that college
students distribute their study sessions throughout the semester rather than
preparing for exams by cramming. This means that college students should use
which approach to memorization?
Question 20 Motivated forgetting is another
name for
Question 1 Cells that “fire together, wire
together.” This saying best captures the concept of
Question 2 A group of students make a
presentation on theories of forgetting. Which student was assigned retrieval
theory?
Question 3 Longterm potentiation involves
_____.
Question 4 To make your studying more
productive, your text suggests all but which of the following?
Question 5 Semantic memory is most
analogous to a(n)
Question 6 The World Wide Web’s structure,
which is organized in terms of a network of associated concepts, is based on
which of the following?
Question 7 Flashbulb memories are most
likely to be associated with
Question 8 Kandel found that the amount of
neurotransmitters released into synapses involved in the gill withdrawal reflex
_____ as the animal learned the conditioned response.
Question 9 Grace knows how to tie a square
knot and how to drive an automobile with a standard transmission. These are examples
of
Question 10 To learn the EGBDF musical
scale, Rybeccah uses the saying “Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge.” Which mnemonic
technique is Rybeccah using?
Question 11 Dr. Ohno conducts research on
retrospective memory. Which type of memory will Ohno’s research participants be
recalling?
Question 12 In contrast to maintenance
rehearsal, elaborative rehearsal involves
Question 13 All of the following are
categories of declarative memory EXCEPT
Question 14 Most people consider
recognition tasks to be easier than recall tasks, possibly because _____.
Question 15 Even though she was only a
toddler at the time, 45yearold Jean has a vivid picture in her mind of her
mother weeping when the television announced that President Kennedy had been
assassinated. Jean’s experience is an example of which of the following?
Question 16 A retrieval cue is
Question 17 In his research on memory,
Kandel demonstrated that
Question 18 Eric Kandel studied the
formation of memories in the
Question 19 The major role of genes in
memory may be their ability to control
Question 20 In memory, as time passes
between learning and recall,
Question 1 _____ are memory circuits in the
brain that consist of complicated networks of nerve cells.
Question 2 In a study reported in the text,
AfricanAmerican children were told stories in which light and darkcomplexioned
AfricanAmerican characters were associated with either positive or negative
attributes. When the children were asked to recall the stories, what happened?
Question 3 Which of the following
psychologists is a leading expert on eyewitness testimony?
Question 4 What is the current status of
research on memoryenhancing drugs?
Question 5 Dr. Ohno conducts research on
retrospective memory. Which type of memory will Ohno’s research participants be
recalling?
Question 6 All of the following are
categories of declarative memory EXCEPT
Question 7 Experts suggest that college
students distribute their study sessions throughout the semester rather than
preparing for exams by cramming. This means that college students should use
which approach to memorization?
Question 8 ______ is the system by which we
retain information and bring it to mind.
Question 9 Even though she was only a
toddler at the time, 45yearold Jean has a vivid picture in her mind of her
mother weeping when the television announced that President Kennedy had been
assassinated. Jean’s experience is an example of which of the following?
Question 10 While Althea was filling out a
job application, memory of her current address prevented her from accurately
remembering her previous address. This is an example of
Question 11 When Jacques wants to learn a
new concept, he attempts to connect it with previously existing knowledge. This
is an example of
Question 12 In his studies of memory,
Ebbinghaus found that ______ of the information was lost by the end of the
first day after studying, and that ______ of the information was lost after a
month had passed.
Question 13 Regarding research on
forgetting and decay theory, which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 14 When Louise told her friend
about a book she had just read, she was able to provide a lot of details about
the last several pages. This demonstrates the
Question 15 Kandel found that the amount of
neurotransmitters released into synapses involved in the gill withdrawal reflex
_____ as the animal learned the conditioned response.
Question 16 Regarding declarative memory,
which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 17 Sleep is important for which
memory process?
Question 18 Flashbulb memories are most
likely to be associated with
Question 19 Where memory is concerned, the
hippocampus _____.
Question 20 According to constructionist
theory, Gwendolyn’s negative stereotype of how Asians behave is an example of
a(n)
Question 1 When Jacques wants to learn a
new concept, he attempts to connect it with previously existing knowledge. This
is an example of
Question 2 Which of the following suggests
that longterm memory is organized in terms of an elaborate arrangement of
associated concepts?
Question 3 The conversion of shortterm
memory into longterm declarative memory most likely involves the
Question 4 Why do students generally
perform better on multiplechoice tests than on essay tests?
Question 5 Regarding research on forgetting
and decay theory, which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 6 Regarding eyewitness testimony,
which of the following statements is FALSE?
Question 7 In retrograde amnesia,
Question 8 Regarding eidetic imagery, which
of the following statements is TRUE?
Question 9 The major role of genes in
memory may be their ability to control
Question 10 All but which of the following
factors influence the reliability of eyewitness testimony?
Question 11 Grace knows how to tie a square
knot and how to drive an automobile with a standard transmission. These are
examples of
Question 12 The levelsofprocessing theory
explains the
Question 13 Dr. Ohno conducts research on
retrospective memory. Which type of memory will Ohno’s research participants be
recalling?
Question 14 The process of converting
unstable, shortterm memory into lasting, stable memories is called
Question 15 Because of an accident he
suffered last month, Jason suffers from anterograde amnesia. As a result, he
may have trouble remembering _____.
Question 16 When questioning eyewitnesses,
openended questions tend to _________ but tend to elicit _________.
Question 17 Which student is taking a test
that is a recognition task?
Question 18 In a free recall task, an
individual is asked _____.
Question 19 The Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve
suggests that forgetting
Question 20 Tasha is studying for a test in
geography. She has discovered that the word “HOMES” can help her remember the
names of the Great Lakes. Tasha is using a(n) _____ to aid her memory.
1. The system by
which we retain information and bring it to mind is called
a) sensation.
b) cognition.
c) learning.
d) memory.
e) perception.
2. Many
psychologists conceptualize human memory as a type of information processing
system that has three basic processes:
a) declarative,
procedural, and explicit.
b) semantic, visual,
and acoustic.
c) consolidation,
elaboration, and rehearsal.
d) sensory,
short-term, and long-term memory.
e) encoding,
storage, and retrieval.
3. What is the order
of processing in memory?
a) Storage,
retrieval, encoding
b) Storage,
encoding, retrieval
c) Encoding,
storage, retrieval
d) Encoding,
retrieval, storage
e) Retrieval,
storage, encoding
4. Memory encoding
that is based on meaning is called
a) association
encoding.
b) semantic
encoding.
c) acoustic
encoding.
d) visual encoding.
e) verbal encoding.
5. Encoding that
involves converting auditory signals into strings of recognizable sounds is
called
a) vocal encoding.
b) internal
encoding.
c) acoustic
encoding.
d) sub-auditory
encoding.
e) semantic
encoding.
6. In memory
encoding, mental picture is to ________ as meaning is to ________.
a) acoustic;
semantic
b) semantic; visual
c) visual; acoustic
d) visual; semantic
e) semantic;
acoustic
7. Which of the
following best describes memory storage?
a) The process of
retaining information in memory
b) The recognition
and storage of sensory impressions
c) The process of
accessing and bringing into consciousness information stored in memory
d) The lingering
mental representations of a visual image
e) The process of
converting information into a form that can be stored in memory
8. Remembering how
many windows there are in your bedroom involves which type of memory encoding?
a) Acoustic
b) Eidetic
c) Echoic
d) Semantic
e) Visual
9. The ability to
access stored information from memory often depends on the availability of
________ in one's present environment that are associated with the original
learning and help jog one's awareness.
a) traces
b) phonological
loops
c) retrieval cues
d) sensory registers
e) engrams
10. The best memory
usually results from which type of encoding?
a) Verbal
b) Semantic
c) Acoustic
d) Visual
e) Echoic
11. Retrieval of
memories is most successful when cues present at recall are similar to those
present during the initial conversion of information into memory. This is
referred to as which principle?
a) Encoding
specificity
b) Serial position
c) Primacy
d) Chunking
e) Recency
12. The encoding
specificity principle suggests that things
a) that are learned
first are remembered better than things that are learned later.
b) that are learned
later are remembered better than things that are learned first.
c) are remembered
better when they are learned first and last.
d) are remembered
better if cues during recall are similar to those present during learning.
e) are remembered
better when large amounts of information are broken down into more manageable bits.
13. While Zubin was
in the cheese section of a store, his wife called him on his cellular telephone
to remind him to pick up some cantaloupe. By the time he got to the produce
section, he had forgotten what he was supposed to pick up, only to remember it
again when he walked through the cheese section. This is an example of
a) the
tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon.
b) context-dependent
memory.
c) rehearsal.
d) semantic coding.
e) chunking.
14. Information is
better recalled in the situation in which it was originally learned. This
phenomenon is termed
a) memory without
awareness.
b) retrieval-induced
forgetting.
c) directed
forgetting.
d) the
context-dependent memory effect.
e) echoic memory.
15. Godden and
Baddeley conducted research showing that swimmers who learned material on the
beach were better able to recall the material when tested on the beach than
when immersed in water. This effect was an example of
a) the semantic
encoding principle.
b) role-specific
rehearsal.
c) context-dependent
memory.
d) state-dependent
memory.
e) chunking.
16. A retrieval cue
is a(n)
a) experimental task
in which subjects are presented with a stimulus that primes them to respond in
a particular way.
b) process for
enhancing retention of information by breaking the information into smaller,
more easily recalled chunks.
c) lingering mental
representation of a sound.
d) lingering mental
representation of a visual image.
e) stimulus
associated with original learning that helps jog one's memory.
17. People have
superior recall for material if they are in the same physiological or
psychological condition as when they learned it. This is known as
a) state-dependent
memory.
b) context-dependent
memory.
c) short-term
memory.
d) internal memory.
e) iconic memory.
18. When did Kenny
experience the state-dependent memory effect?
a) When he studied
for a history test while listening to music and could not remember all the
facts of the Civil War until he listened to the same CD
b) When he saw a
horror movie and couldn't get one of the violent scenes out of his mind
c) When he was sad
and left his cell phone on top of the TV set and didn't remember to look for it
there until the next time that he was sad
d) When he couldn't
remember the name of the professor he had the year before in psychology,
although he was sure the name began with a "C" and had three
syllables
e) When he was
introduced to his girlfriend's uncle in the restaurant and couldn't remember his
name until they met again in the same restaurant
19. The
context-dependent memory effect would lead us to expect that Barrie, the victim
of a mugging, would be able to best recall details of the crime at which
location?
a) At the police
station, where he can think most clearly
b) At the scene of
the crime, where he had the experience
c) At home, where he
feels most secure
d) In his lawyer's
office, where he feels most supported
e) None of the
above; recall is not influenced by location
20. A memory storage
system that contains memory of impressions for a very brief time (a few seconds
or less) is called
a) short-term memory
b) limited memory.
c) sensory memory.
d) temporary memory.
e) echoic memory.
21. The storage
device of sensory memory is called the
a) phonological
loop.
b) consolidation
register.
c) temporary storage
center.
d) sensory register.
e) semantic network.
22. In sensory
memory, auditory stimuli are to ________ memory as visual stimuli are to
________ memory.
a) eidetic; iconic
b) iconic; echoic
c) echoic; iconic
d) acoustic;
semantic
e) semantic;
acoustic
23. Iconic memory is
a type of
a) short-term
memory.
b) visual sensory
memory.
c) auditory sensory
memory.
d) visual limited
memory.
e) working memory.
24. Echoic memory
differs from iconic memory in that
a) it is more
fleeting.
b) it is a type of
photographic memory
c) it is
longer-lasting
d) only iconic
memory is stored in the sensory register.
e) only iconic
memories can be transferred to short-term memory.
25. Which of the
following statements is true about eidetic imagery?
a) Eidetic images
are perceived as clearly as actual photographs.
b) Eidetic imagery
usually disappears by age five.
c) Eidetic imagery
is more common in adults than in children.
d) About 20 percent
of children have eidetic imagery.
e) Eidetic imagery
is more commonly known as photographic memory.
26. Mark's friends
say he has a "photographic memory." When Mark tries to recall a page
in the textbook, the memory can be described as
a) blurred.
b) quite vivid.
c) clear as a
photograph of the page.
d) grainy.
e) largely
inaccurate.
27. A form of visual
memory in which a visual image is recalled in such vivid detail that it is as
if the person recalling it is still looking at the original image is termed
a) eidetic imagery.
b) long-term
potentiation.
c) echoic memory.
d) flashbulb memory.
e) retrospective
memory.
28. Which of the
following statements is true about short-term memory?
a) Short-term memory
has an unlimited capacity.
b) Short-term memory
makes use of semantic coding.
c) Short-term memory
allows a person to process and retain sensory information for about two
minutes.
d) Use of
maintenance rehearsal can extend short-term memory.
e) Short-term memory
relies more on visual coding than acoustic coding.
29. Short-term
memory relies primarily on
a) kinesthetic
coding.
b) acoustic coding.
c) semantic coding.
d) eidetic coding.
e) visual coding.
30. Working memory
is conceptualized as the mind's
a) pencil.
b) sharpener.
c) blackboard.
d) camera.
e) tape.
31. The memory
system that allows one to hold and mull over information in one's mind for
brief periods of time is called
a) working memory.
b) the sensory
register.
c) long-term memory.
d) echoic memory.
e) eidetic memory.
32. The capacity of
short-term memory was investigated by
a) Loftus.
b) Sperling.
c) Baddeley.
d) Miller.
e) Tulving.
33. The "Magic
7" refers to the
a) duration of
sensory memory.
b) capacity of
short-term memory.
c) capacity of
sensory memory.
d) duration of
short-term memory.
e) encoding
modalities of long-term memory.
34. What is the
capacity of a person's short-term memory?
a) about 2–3 items
b) about 5–9 items
c) about 11–14 items
d) about 15–20 items
e) an unlimited
number of items
35. The process of
breaking a large amount of information down into smaller pieces to make it
easier to recall is termed
a) maintenance
rehearsal.
b) elaborative
rehearsal.
c) a full-report
technique.
d) a partial-report
technique.
e) chunking.
36. Sean stopped
outside his professor's office to check on the answers to a quiz. When he began
to write the answers down, his pen ran out of ink. He repeated the last four
answers to himself while he rushed to his dormitory room to write them down.
This is an example of
a) maintenance
rehearsal.
b) elaborative
rehearsal.
c) whole rehearsal.
d) partial
rehearsal.
e) chunking.
37. Maintenance
rehearsal is
a) synonymous with
chunking.
b) consciously
repeating information over and over again.
c) connecting
to-be-remembered information with already-stored information.
d) synonymous with
whole rehearsal.
e) picturing an
object, pattern, or image in your mind.
38. When school kids
say the Pledge of Allegiance, they break its one long sentence into twelve
unvarying parts to make it easier to remember ("I pledge allegiance//to
the flag//of the United States//of America//and to the republic//...").
This demonstrates which of the following?
a) Chunking
b) Maintenance
rehearsal
c) Consolidation
d) The encoding
specificity principle
e) Massed practice
effects
39. The
four-component model of working memory consists of the phonological loop, the
visuospatial sketchpad, the episodic buffer, and the
a) audio receiver.
b) office assistant.
c) central
executive.
d) movement
coordinator.
e) memory overseer.
40. Michele's car
hit a truck that stopped short in front of her on the expressway. When the
truck suddenly started and began to speed away, Michele concentrated on
retaining a visual image of the truck so that she would be able to describe it
to the police. Which part of the four-component model of working memory was
actively processing her information?
a) The episodic
buffer
b) The central
executive
c) The audio
receiver
d) The visuospatial
sketchpad
e) The phonological
loop
41. Which component
of working memory stores speech-based material?
a) Central executive
b) Visuospatial
sketchpad
c) Episodic buffer
d) Phonological loop
e) Semantic
switchboard
42. In the
four-component model of working memory, visual is to ________ as verbal is to
________.
a) episodic buffer;
visuospatial sketchpad
b) phonological
loop; central executive
c) visuospatial
sketchpad; phonological loop
d) episodic buffer;
central executive
e) central
executive; episodic buffer
43. In the
four-component model of working memory, which component is best described as
"the boss"?
a) The central
executive
b) The visuospatial
sketchpad
c) The phonological
loop
d) The system
manager
e) The episodic
buffer
44. In the
four-component model of working memory, what is true about the
"slaves"?
a) There are two of
them.
b) They work
independently of each other.
c) They are called
slaves because they work around the clock even when we're dreaming.
d) They do the
bidding of long-term memory.
e) Only one
"slave" component can be active at a time.
45. The
four-component model of working memory suggests that which of the following
pairs of tasks would interfere LEAST with one another?
a) reading a
paragraph while trying to remember a string of numbers
b) scanning a visual
display to locate a square surrounded by circles while thinking about the route
you drive home each night
c) humming a tune to
yourself while changing lanes on the highway
d) reading a paragraph
while trying to remember a string of letters
e) listening to the
radio while discussing the day's stock market results
46. Evelyn is baking
a cake. She gingerly opens the oven door to try to decide whether the cake is
ready. Based on the way the cake looks and the aroma emanating from it, Evelyn
decides that it is. Which part of the four-component model of working memory
allowed her to integrate the visual image of the cake with the olfactory
information to make that instantaneous decision?
a) The central
executive
b) The episodic
buffer
c) The phonological
loop
d) The modality
linker
e) The visuospatial
sketchpad
47. The process of
converting unstable, short-term memory into lasting, stable memories is called
a) transduction.
b) maintenance rehearsal.
c) elaborative
rehearsal.
d) consolidation.
e) chunking.
48. Which type(s) of
sleep play(s) an important role in the consolidation of daily experiences into
long-term memories?
a) REM sleep only
b) deep, slow-wave
sleep only
c) light sleep only
d) both light sleep
and REM sleep
e) both deep,
slow-wave sleep and REM sleep
49. Compared to
short-term memory, long-term memory relies ________ on semantic coding and
________ on acoustic coding.
a) more; less
b) less; more
c) less; less
d) more; more
e) more; just about
the same
50. When Jacques
wants to learn a new concept, he attempts to connect it with previously
existing knowledge. This is an example of
a) elaborative
rehearsal.
b) maintenance
rehearsal.
c) executive
rehearsal.
d) consolidation.
e) encoding
specificity.
51. When Agnes hears
the word banana, she automatically thinks of concepts such as yellow,
monkeys, and fruit. This may be a demonstration of
a) consolidation.
b) elaborative
processing.
c) the semantic
network model.
d) maintenance
rehearsal.
e) chunking.
52. Which model
suggests that long-term memory is organized in terms of an elaborate
arrangement of associated concepts?
a) The semantic
network model
b) The
constructionist model
c) The three-stage
model
d) The
levels-of-processing model
e) The
three-component model
53. The World Wide
Web's design, with its elaborate structure of interlinking concepts, is based
on which model of memory?
a) Three-component
model
b) Constructionist
model
c)
Levels-of-processing model
d) Semantic network
model
e) Three-stage model
54. The semantic
network model proposes a process in which thinking of a concept leads to a
rippling effect that triggers other related concepts. That process is called
a) consolidation.
b) spreading
activation.
c) neuronal
networking.
d) serial position.
e) savings.
55. The
levels-of-processing model explains the
a) interaction among
the three components of working memory.
b) organization of
the semantic network model.
c) superiority of
elaborative rehearsal to maintenance rehearsal.
d) encoding
specificity principle.
e) process of
consolidating memories during sleep.
56. Which of the
following statements is true about Tim Berners-Lee?
a) He introduced his
invention in the mid-1980s.
b) He originally
thought about naming his invention "Mess."
c) He got the idea
for his invention from his father's mathematics books.
d) He modeled his
invention on the workings of the human brain.
e) He is a
psychologist.
57. Who invented the
World Wide Web?
a) George Miller
b) Tim Berners-Lee
c) Bill Gates
d) Hermann
Ebbinghaus
e) Elizabeth Loftus
58. Procedural
memory is to ________ as declarative memory is to ________.
a) knowing how;
knowing that
b) knowing that;
knowing how
c) knowing when;
knowing who
d) knowing that;
knowing who
e) knowing how;
knowing who
59. Which of the
following statements is true about declarative memory?
a) Declarative
memory is a type of memory stored in short-term memory.
b) Declarative
memory is memory of facts and personal information.
c) Declarative
memory involves motor or performance skills that cannot be verbalized.
d) Declarative
memory is described as implicit.
e) Declarative
memory operates largely unconsciously.
60. Declarative
memory is also known as
a) procedural
memory.
b) demonstrative
memory.
c) semantic memory.
d) explicit memory.
e) implicit memory.
61. June recalled a
procedural memory when she remembered
a) that she saw the
tiger in the zoo last month.
b) who gave her her
favorite birthday present, the doll with the braids.
c) how to play
"Chopsticks" on the piano.
d) why she was not
supposed to play with her mother's makeup.
e) where she left
her mittens.
62. Which of the
following best describes retrospective memory?
a) Memory of past
experiences or events and previously acquired information
b) Memory of how to
do things that require motor or performance skills
c) Photographic
memory
d) Memory of things
one plans to do in the future
e) Memory accessed
without conscious effort
63. Another name for
episodic memory is
a) semantic memory.
b) prospective
memory.
c) retrospective
memory.
d) procedural
memory.
e) autobiographical
memory.
64. Your general
world information (e.g., state capitals, U.S. presidents, etc.) is stored in
a) episodic memory.
b) semantic memory.
c) prospective
memory.
d) retrospective
memory.
e) short-term
memory.
65. Keiko knows that
Salt Lake City is the capital of Utah and that George Washington was the first
president of the United States. This information is stored in
a) procedural
memory.
b) declarative
memory.
c) historical
memory.
d) representative
memory.
e) prospective
memory.
66. Cynthia's retrospective
memory was displayed when she recalled
a) how to ice skate
effortlessly, after a period of three years.
b) every word on the
page of a book after looking at it briefly.
c) that Bismarck was
the capital of North Dakota.
d) how to assemble
the juicer, even though she had lost the instruction manual.
e) that she was
going to start a new dance class a week from next Tuesday.
67. Which question
is most likely to be associated with episodic memory?
a) Who wrote The
Catcher in the Rye?
b) Where did I go on
my first date?
c) What time is my
appointment with the dentist next week?
d) Who was the first
astronaut to walk on the moon?
e) Which courses
will I take in my next semester of college?
68. Morty says,
"It's time to take my medication." Which type of memory has Morty
relied on in this example?
a) Retrospective
memory
b) Prospective
memory
c) Autobiographical
memory
d) Episodic memory
e) Semantic memory
69. Paula's
procedural memory told her
a) who was having a
party that night.
b) how to use makeup
to conceal the blemish on her cheek.
c) where she put her
gold watch.
d) what time her
date was due to arrive.
e) why her parents
wanted her to be home before midnight.
70. Grace knows how
to tie a square knot and how to drive an automobile with a standard
transmission. These are examples of
a) declarative
memory.
b) semantic memory.
c) procedural
memory.
d) functional
memory.
e) episodic memory.
71. Which of the
following statements is true about procedural memory?
a) Procedural memory
is used when we need to consciously recall a set of procedures to be followed
in completing a task.
b) Procedural
memories are easily verbalized.
c) Procedural memory
is related to implicit memory.
d) Procedural memory
involves personal experiences.
e) Procedural memory
is a type of short-term memory.
72. Implicit memory
can be demonstrated through the use of
a) free recall.
b) priming tasks.
c) semantic network
models.
d) levels of processing.
e) forgetting
curves.
73. One difference
between declarative memory and procedural memory is that
a) declarative
memory has to do with "knowing how," whereas procedural memory has to
do with "knowing that."
b) declarative
memories are implicit, whereas procedural memories are explicit.
c) declarative
memories are semantic or episodic, whereas procedural memories are
retrospective or prospective.
d) declarative
memories are easy to verbalize, whereas procedural memories are not.
e) declarative
memory is short-term, whereas procedural memory is long-term.
74. The view that
memory is based on recreating the past rather than passively storing the past
is called
a) semantic network
theory.
b) encoding specificity
theory.
c) context-dependent
memory.
d) constructionist
theory.
e)
levels-of-processing theory.
75. An organized
knowledge structure reflecting one's past experience and future expectations is
called a(n)
a) engram.
b) mnemonic.
c) memory schema.
d) episodic buffer.
e) reconstruction.
76. Gwendolyn's
negative stereotype of how Asians behave is an example of a
a) prospective
memory.
b) retrospective
memory.
c) memory schema.
d) semantic network
model.
e) priming task.
77. According to constructionist
theory,
a) memories are
never accurate reflections of events.
b) memories are more
like realistic paintings than impressionist paintings.
c) memories are
carbon copies of reality.
d) memory is better
when an event coincides with one's set of beliefs.
e) memories are
accurate, but, like cameras, they have a point of view.
78. In a study
reported in the text, African American children were told stories in which
light- and dark-complexioned African American characters were associated with
either positive or negative attributes. The children were then asked to recall
the stories. What were the results?
a) The children
remembered more stories in which the light-complexioned characters had negative
attributes and the dark-complexioned characters had positive attributes.
b) The children
remembered more stories in which the light-complexioned characters had positive
attributes and the dark-complexioned characters had negative attributes.
c) The children
preferred stories in which the light-complexioned characters had positive
attributes and the dark-complexioned characters had negative attributes.
d) The children
preferred stories in which the light-complexioned characters had negative attributes
and the dark-complexioned characters had positive attributes.
e) The children were
able to remember all stories equally well, regardless of the attributes
assigned to the characters.
79. Compared to
other long-term memories, flashbulb memories are
a) less vivid and
less accurate.
b) more vivid and
more accurate.
c) more vivid and
just as inaccurate.
d) less vivid and
more accurate.
e) more vivid and
less accurate.
80. Even though she
was only a toddler at the time, 45-year-old Jean has a vivid picture in her
mind of her mother weeping when the television announced that President Kennedy
had been assassinated. Jean's experience is an example of which phenomenon?
a) Retrograde
amnesia
b) Tip-of-the-tongue
phenomenon
c) Long-term
potentiation
d) Misinformation
effect
e) Flashbulb memory
81. What is true
about flashbulb memories?
a) They are more
accurate than ordinary memories.
b) Prolonged or
extreme stress is liable to produce vivid flashbulb-type memories.
c) Flashbulb
memories are emotionally charged.
d) Flashbulb
memories are never accurate.
e) Flashbulb
memories tend to fade after a couple of months.
82. Wanda suffered
for a long time while in an abusive, stressful relationship. After she and her
boyfriend broke up, she did not have vivid memories of those three years.
Instead, the stress hormones released by her ________ gland(s) dampened her
memories.
a) pancreas
b) adrenal
c) thyroid
d) pituitary
e) parathyroid
83. Elizabeth Loftus
had subjects view a film of a car accident involving a stop sign. One group was
misinformed and told that the sign was a yield sign. Later, when both groups
were asked to describe what they saw, the misinformed group
a) was more likely
to say they saw a yield sign.
b) tended to recall
many more correct details about the accident.
c) reported less
confidence in their ability to recall.
d) stubbornly stuck
to their memory of having seen a stop sign
e) recalled many
additional false "facts" about the accident.
84. Which of the
following statements is true about eyewitness testimony?
a) Eyewitness
testimony is often flawed and full of errors.
b) Eyewitnesses are
more likely to make mistakes when identifying members of their own race than
when identifying members of another race.
c) Eyewitness
confidence in their testimony is strongly related to the accuracy of their
testimony.
d) People who take
longer to answer questions in giving testimony are more likely to be accurate
than those who respond quickly.
e) Average-looking
people are more likely to be accurately remembered and identified than
unattractive looking people.
85. Five friends
witnessed a store robbery. Who is likely to be the most accurate eyewitness?
a) Pia, who is the
only one of the five who is of a different race than the perpetrator
b) Ben, who answers
the police's questions after taking a long time to think about each one
c) Celia, who used
to work in a store similar to the clothing store that was robbed
d) Anthony, who is
the only one of the five being asked suggestive questions by the rookie
policeman
e) Valerie, who is
the only one of the five who considered the perpetrator to be just
average-looking
86. In investigative
questioning, how do leading questions and open-ended questions compare?
a) Open-ended
questions lead to more accuracy but fewer details than leading questions.
b) Open-ended
questions lead to more accuracy and more details than leading questions.
c) Leading questions
lead to more accuracy but fewer details than open-ended questions.
d) Leading questions
lead to more accuracy and more details than open-ended questions.
e) Both types of
questions lead equally to many details but little accuracy.
87. Which of the
following psychologists is a leading expert on eyewitness testimony?
a) Baddeley
b) Loftus
c) Lashley
d) Tulving
e) Miller
88. Which of the
following calls into question the credibility of recovered memories of
childhood abuse?
a) Research showing
that false memories can be created under experimental conditions
b) Research showing
that people who claim to be abuse victims tend to be dishonest
c) Research showing
that hypnosis always heightens suggestibility to false memories
d) Research showing
that the misinformation effect played a key role in several cases of false
allegations
e) The horrific
nature of the memories
89. What can we
conclude about the validity of long-repressed memories of childhood abuse?
a) They are usually
false memories.
b) It's not possible
to tell which ones are true and which ones are false.
c) The ones that are
uncovered under hypnosis are likely to be true.
d) They are mostly
false because childhood sexual abuse is not that common.
e) They are probably
true because those who are abused in childhood are apt to totally repress what
happened to them.
90. Summarize the
three-stage model of memory.
91. Among theories
of forgetting, decay theory is also known as
a) retrieval theory.
b) savings theory.
c) trace theory.
d) fading theory.
e) constructionist
theory.
92. The idea that
memory gradually disintegrates over time is the basis of
a) decay theory.
b) interference
theory.
c) retrieval theory.
d) encoding
specificity.
e) disintegration theory.
93. One of
Ebbinghaus's innovations was the use of what as study material for testing
memory?
a) Uncommon
adjectives
b) Calendar dates
c) Foreign words
d) Nonsense
syllables
e) Abstract symbols
94. The Ebbinghaus
Forgetting Curve suggests that forgetting
a) occurs slowly at
first and then speeds up.
b) occurs uniformly
over time.
c) occurs quickly at
first and then slows down.
d) does not occur
until at least 24 hours have passed.
e) is complete
within the first few hours.
95. In his studies
of memory, Ebbinghaus found that ________ of the information was lost by the
end of the first day after studying and that ________ of the information was
lost after a month had passed.
a) 22 percent; 66
percent
b) 33 percent; 66
percent
c) 33 percent; 80
percent
d) 66 percent; 80
percent
e) 66 percent; 99
percent
96. Herman counts
the number of times it takes to rehearse a list of nonsense syllables in order
to memorize it. Next he counts the number of times it takes to relearn the list
after a month has passed. Herman then calculates the difference between these
numbers of times and determines the percentage gain he made between the two
efforts at memorization. Herman uses this figure as a measure of memory
retention. Which technique is Herman using?
a) Savings method
b) Method of loci
c) Peg word system
d) Massed practice
e) Encoding
specificity
97. Jeffrey crams
for all of his exams. In scientific terms, Jeffrey's approach to memorization
is called
a) spaced practice.
b) distributed
practice.
c) massed practice.
d) delayed practice.
e) overlearning.
98. Experts suggest
that college students should distribute their study sessions throughout the
semester rather than preparing for exams by cramming. This means that college
students should use which approach to memorization?
a) Spaced practice
b) Massed practice
c) Distributed
learning
d) Delayed practice
e) Overlearning
99. Interference
theory explains forgetting in terms of
a) inadequate
retrieval cues.
b) lack of practice.
c) similarity of
events.
d) encoding failure.
e) mental fatigue.
100. Proactive
interference occurs when
a) older memories
interfere with newer memories.
b) newer memories
interfere with older memories.
c) more frequently
experienced events interfere with less frequently experienced events.
d) less frequently
experienced events interfere with more frequently experienced events.
e) items in the
middle of a list interfere with memorizing the first and last items.
101. Wendy's
forgetting was due to proactive interference when she
a) remembered what
her scores were on the SATs that she took the year before, but not what her
scores were on the PSATs that she took two years earlier.
b) recalled the
names of the winners on her favorite reality show for the past two seasons but
not the earlier ones.
c) couldn't remember
her new best friend's cell phone number because she kept confusing it with her
former best friend's cell phone number.
d) failed to
remember her appointment with the dentist because unconsciously she wanted to
miss it.
e) remembered the
first and last items on her "to do" list, but not the one in the
middle.
102. While Althea
was filling out a job application, memory of her current address prevented her
from accurately remembering her previous address. This is an example of
a) retrograde
amnesia.
b) anterograde
amnesia.
c) retroactive
interference.
d) proactive
interference.
e) the serial
position effect.
103. The serial
position effect occurs when people
a) remember the
first things on a list but forget the last ones.
b) remember the last
things on a list but forget the first ones.
c) remember the
first and last things on a list better than the middle ones.
d) have difficulty
remembering the first and last things on a list.
e) remember just
about every other item on a list.
104. "I can
count to ten," says 4-year-old Tiffany. "It goes like this: one, two,
three, seven, six, nine, ten." Tiffany's counting exemplifies the
a) primacy effect.
b) recency effect.
c) serial position
effect.
d) spaced practice
effect.
e) alphabet effect.
105. In memory
processes, the primacy effect results in
a) inferior memory
for items at the beginning of a list.
b) inferior memory
for items that were overlearned.
c) superior memory
for items at the end of a list.
d) superior memory
for items at the beginning of a list.
e) superior memory
for items at both the beginning and the end of a list.
106. In memory, as
time passes between learning and recall,
a) both the primacy
effect and the recency effect weaken.
b) neither the primacy
effect nor the recency effect weakens.
c) the primacy
effect but not the recency effect weakens.
d) the recency
effect but not the primacy effect weakens.
e) the recency
effect becomes stronger and the primacy effect weakens.
107. To avoid
interference, your text recommends doing which of the following?
a) Stay up and study
all night for a test, as sleep can erase memory.
b) Don't waste
mental resources by overlearning information.
c) Schedule classes
in a block without a break to take full advantage of your maximum time of
alertness.
d) Practice beyond
the point necessary to reproduce material without error.
e) Study subjects
that are similar in content in back-to-back fashion.
108. Neville is
memorizing parts of the brain for his psychology exam. Neville rehearses the
information over and over, well beyond the point where he can recognize and
list all of the parts of the brain. Which memory technique is Neville
utilizing?
a) Eidetic imagery
b) Mnemonics
c) Distributed
practice
d) Spaced practice
e) Overlearning
109. When Louise
told her friend about a book she had just read, she was able to provide a lot
of details about the last several pages. This demonstrates the
a) spaced practice
effect.
b) distributed
practice effect.
c) primacy effect.
d) recency effect.
e) massed versus
spaced practice effect.
110. Which theory of
forgetting suggests that forgetting is the result of a failure to access stored
memories?
a) Interference
theory
b) Constructionist
theory
c) Three-stage
theory
d) Decay theory
e) Retrieval theory
111. Encoding
failure occurs when
a) information to be
retrieved never got into the brain.
b) old information
interferes with newer information.
c) new information
interferes with older encoded information.
d) retrieval
encoding cues are missing.
e) information to be
retrieved is just out of reach.
112. Martha only
found out from the police that she was an eyewitness after the fact. At the
time, it just seemed like another city dweller in a hurry was getting into his
car and speeding away, so she made no effort to remember any details about the
man or the car. Martha's inability to remember is most likely due to
a) proactive
interference.
b) retroactive
interference.
c) retrograde
amnesia.
d) encoding failure.
e) the serial
position effect.
113. While taking
her psychology exam, Edith is certain that she knows who developed the
forgetting curve. She remembers studying it, and she can get a vague picture of
where the material is in her textbook. Edith's certainty that she knows
something, combined with her inability to recall it, is called
a) dissociative
amnesia.
b) proactive
interference.
c) retroactive
interference.
d) the serial position
effect.
e) the
tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon.
114. Which of the
following statements is true about the tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) phenomenon?
a) The phenomenon is
relatively rare, occurring about twice a year to the average college student.
b) Most TOTs involve
common nouns, such as people's names.
c) Only a small
percentage of TOTs are successfully resolved.
d) TOTs tend to
decrease in later life.
e) TOT memories that
are not retrieved within 10 minutes are not likely to be retrieved at all.
115. Motivated
forgetting is another name for
a) repression.
b) regression.
c) retroactive
interference.
d) anterograde
amnesia.
e) childhood
amnesia.
116. Repression was
first proposed by
a) Loftus.
b) Freud.
c) Miller.
d) Baddeley.
e) Ebbinghaus.
117. According to
Freud, we repress certain things because
a) information
deteriorates and fades away over time.
b) the forgotten
material is too anxiety-provoking.
c) that which was
forgotten bore too much similarity to events that were remembered.
d) we never encoded
them into our memory in the first place.
e) they are too
inconsequential and ordinary to remember.
118. Which student
is taking a test that is a recognition task?
a) Elaine, who takes
an exam in her Spanish class in which she is presented with a word in English
and then must write the Spanish equivalent
b) Erin, who takes
an oral exam in her astronomy class in which she must list the planets in order
c) Melissa, who
takes a multiple-choice exam in her geography class and needs to pick the
capital city out of four
d) Sharon, who takes
an essay exam in her history class in which she must discuss four factors
influencing the outcome of the Vietnam War
e) Quincy, whose
biology teacher shows the class a video of a dissected rat and asks them to
name the parts of the body that she is pointing out
119. In general,
which type of memory task produces better retrieval?
a) Serial recall
b) Paired-associates
recall
c) Free recall
d) Recall
e) Recognition
120. Loss of
memories of past events is
a) retrograde
amnesia.
b) anterograde
amnesia.
c) proactive
interference.
d) retroactive
interference.
e) dissociative
amnesia.
121. Retrograde
amnesia is to anterograde amnesia as ________ is to ________.
a) ordinary memory;
traumatic memory
b) childhood; old
age
c) old age;
childhood
d) loss of old
memories; loss of new memories
e) loss of new
memories; loss of old memories
122. In anterograde
amnesia,
a) there is an
inability to form new long-term memories.
b) there is an
inability to retrieve old long-term memories.
c) new information
interferes with old.
d) old information
interferes with new.
e) there is an
inability to remember old or new information.
123. Paul has
suffered a head injury that causes him to have no memory of the events
preceding the injury. He is suffering from
a) retrograde
amnesia.
b) anterograde
amnesia.
c) childhood
amnesia.
d) retroactive
interference.
e) dissociative
amnesia.
124. Ella has
suffered a head injury. She is no longer able to form new long-term memories.
She is suffering from
a) retrograde
amnesia.
b) anterograde
amnesia.
c) proactive
interference.
d) dissociative
amnesia.
e) childhood
amnesia.
125. When asked
about her earliest memory, Norma Jean says, "I can't remember anything
before kindergarten. I remember being in the Christmas play at school."
Norma Jean's inability to recall earlier events in her life is best described
as which kind of amnesia?
a) Infantile
b) Retrograde
c) Anterograde
d) Dissociative
e) Childhood
126. Which of the
following individuals most likely has dissociative amnesia?
a) Rebecca, who has
no memory of anything that happened before her fourth birthday party
b) Perry, who has
Alzheimer's disorder and is not aware that he is living in a nursing home
c) Tyler, who became
an amnesiac after diving into the water and hitting his head on the side of the
pool
d) Sean, who drank
too much and can't remember what happened before he passed out at the party
e) Cathy, a teenager
who suffered sexual abuse and doesn't remember how she ended up in a homeless
shelter
127. Psychologically
caused amnesia is referred to as
a) dissociative
amnesia.
b) retrograde
amnesia.
c) reactive amnesia.
d) anterograde
amnesia.
e) infantile
amnesia.
128. Describe three
theories of forgetting.
129. What is an
engram?
a) A nonsense
syllable
b) A neuronal
network
c) A physical trace
of a memory
d) A retrieval cue
e) An acronym
130. Who exerted
considerable effort trying to locate the engram?
a) Loftus
b) Freud
c) Lashley
d) Miller
e) Kandel
131. The overall
outcome of Lashley's work was the
a) discovery of
different engrams for different sorts of memories.
b) realization that
memories are not stored in any specific brain structure.
c) discovery of a
single engram for various sorts of memories.
d) localization of
engrams in the hippocampus.
e) confirmation that
memories are housed in the cerebral cortex.
132. Memory circuits
in the brain that consist of complicated networks of nerve cells are called
a) engrams.
b) phonological
loops.
c) memory schemas.
d) semantic
networks.
e) neuronal
networks.
133. Regarding ideas
about where memories are stored, the current belief is that
a) engrams do exist
in the way Lashley believed.
b) long-term
memories are stored in the amygdala.
c) engrams exist but
currently available technology does not permit identifying them.
d) memories are
stored in neuronal networks rather than individual cells.
e) the engram is
housed in the brainstem.
134. Which limbic
system brain structure plays an important role in the memory of facts and daily
experiences?
a) The hypothalamus
b) The hippocampus
c) The thalamus
d) The medulla
e) The brainstem
135. With regard to
memory, what role does the hippocampus play?
a) It is the final
destiny for new memories.
b) It stores
short-term memories.
c) It is involved in
the formation of procedural memories.
d) It processes
semantic and episodic memories.
e) It encodes all
implicit memories.
136. Which of the
following brain structures plays an important role in encoding memories charged
with fear and anger?
a) The amygdala
b) The thalamus
c) The hypothalamus
d) The cerebral
cortex
e) The brainstem
137. Eric Kandel
studied formation of memories in the
a) garden slug.
b) sea snail.
c) tree frog.
d) white rat.
e) smart fly.
138. In his research
on memory, Kandel demonstrated that
a) memory power can
be boosted through the use of mnemonics.
b) damage to the
hippocampus can prevent the formation of new memories.
c) memories are
stored in complex networks of interconnected brain cells called neuronal
networks.
d) manipulation of
particular genes can enhance learning and memory, producing "smart"
organisms.
e) memory formation
involves biochemical changes occurring at the synaptic level.
139. Kandel
classically conditioned a sea snail. The conditioned stimulus was ________, and
the conditioned response was ________.
a) a mild electric
shock; withdrawing the gills
b) a puff of air;
moving backwards
c) a squirt of
water; withdrawing the gills
d) the light touch
of a feather; moving backwards
e) a buzzing tone;
withdrawing the gills
140. The idea that
synapses can be strengthened by repeated mild electrical stimulation was first
investigated in the
a) rat.
b) pigeon.
c) mouse.
d) rabbit.
e) sea snail.
141. The
strengthening of synaptic connections by repeated electrical stimulation is
known as
a) long-term
potentiation.
b) short-term
potentiation.
c) spreading
activation.
d) functional
potentiation.
e) long-term
consolidation.
142. Many
researchers believe that in order for long-term memory to occur, which of the
following needs to happen?
a) A regeneration of
neurons
b) The creation of
new synapses
c) An increase in
the availability of neurotransmitters
d) Long-term
potentiation
e) A decrease in the
number of neuronal networks
143. What is the
current status of research on memory-enhancing drugs?
a) Strong evidence
that the drugs enhance memory in chimpanzees
b) Strong evidence
that the drugs enhance memory, but only in persons who suffer from Alzheimer's
disorder
c) Strong evidence
that the drugs enhance memory, but only in persons who do not suffer from
Alzheimer's disorder
d) Strong evidence
that the drugs enhance memory in both persons who suffer from Alzheimer's
disorder and persons who do not
e) No compelling
scientific evidence that the drugs enhance memory in humans
144. The major role
of genes in memory may be their ability to control
a) the speed with
which new neurons are regenerated.
b) neurotransmitter
uptake.
c) the production of
proteins that transform short-term memories into long-term memories.
d) which experiences
are encoded.
e) the long-term
potentiation of synaptic connections.
145. Explain some of
the biological components of memory.
146. A device for
improving memory is a(n)
a) mnemonic.
b) engram.
c) consolidator.
d) savings method.
e) visuospatial
sketchpad.
147. Which of the
following is a mnemonic that involves forming a word composed of the first
letters of a series of words?
a) Acrostic
b) Acronym
c) Engram
d) Imagery
e) Chunking
148. In order to
remember that he needs to buy celery, bread, and tissues, Wayne pictures his
car with a steering wheel made out of celery stalks, a seat upholstered with
slices of bread, and a tissue box where the rear-view mirror is supposed to be.
Which mnemonic is Wayne using?
a) A visual cue
b) Visual imagery
c) Acrostic
d) Chunking
e) Acronym
149. To learn the
EGBDF musical scale, Robbie uses the saying "Every Good Boy Deserves
Fudge." Which mnemonic technique is Robbie using?
a) acrostic
b) acronym
c) imagery
d) rhyming
e) chunking
150. Summarize some
of the more commonly used mnemonics.
when it comes to retention, in general,a. spaced practice is superior to
massed practiceb. massed practice is superior to spaced practicec. spaced practice
is superior to massed practice for short intervals only
regarding eidetic imagery, which of the following statements is TRUE?a.
eidetic images refer to intense auditory memoriesb. eidetic imagery usually
disappears by age twentyc. eidetic imagery is more common in children than
adults
semantic memory is most analogous to a(n)a. best-selling novelb. diaryc.
journal d. day planner c. encyclopedia
_____ occurs when eyewitnesses are given
incorrect data during the retention interval of memory.c. the primary effectd.
retroactive interference e. the misinformation effect
the ___ plays an important role in encoding emotional experiences, such as
fear responses.a. hippocampusb. cingulate gyrusc. thalamus d. amygdalae.
hypothalamus
where memory is concerned, the hippocampus _____.c. is involved with
processing memories of factual information, but not emotional memoriesd. is
involved with processing long-term memories, but not memories of intermediate
duratione. is involved with processing semantic and episodic memories, but not
procedural memories
many psychologists think of human memory as a type of information
processing system that has ______ basic processes that are called ______. c. 3;
consolidation, elaboration, and rehearsald. 3; sensory memory, short-term memory,
and long-term memorye. 3; encoding, storage, and retrieval
Maintenance rehearsal is a. synonymous with chunkingb. consciously
repeating information over and over again c. c. connecting to-be-remembered
information with already-stored information
in sensory memory, auditory stimuli are to _____ memory as visual stimuli
are to ____ memory.a. eidetic; iconicb. iconic; echoic c. echoic; iconic
the best memory usually results from which type of encodinga. verbal b.
semantic c. acoustic
from a biological perspective, memories are most like which of the
following?a. an etching or traceb. a flashbulbc. a circuit
in general, which type of memory task produces better retrieval? c. free
recalld. recalle. recognition
an organized knowledge structure reflecting one's past experience and
future expectations os called a c. memory schemad. semantic network e.
reconstructed memory
compared to short-term memory, long-term memory reliesa. more on semantic
coding and less on acoustic coding b. more on visual coding and less on
acoustic coding c. about the same on acoustic coding
flashbulb memories are most likely to be associated witha. misinformation
effectsb. recovered memories of early childhood abusec. emotionally charged
experiences
Who invented the World Wide Web?a. Berners-Leeb. Millerc. Averhart and
Bigler
all of the following are categories of declarative memory EXCEPTa.
semanticb. episodicc. procedural
in memory processes, the primacy effect refers toc. superior memory for
items a the end of a listd. superior memory for items at the beginning of a
list e. superior memory for items at not the beginning and end of the list
procedural long-term memory might best be described as a. knowing whenb.
knowing what c. knowing how
declarative memory is also know as c. semantic memoryd. explicit memorye.
implicit memory
all but which of the following factors influence the reliability of
eyewitness testimony?a. ease of recallb. degree of confidencec. the serial
position effect
_____ is the system by which we retain information and bring it to mind.c.
learning d. memorye. perception
one of Ebbinghaus's innovations was using _____ as study material for
testing memory.c. foreign wordsd. nonsense syllablese. symbols
because of an accident he suffered last month, Jason suffers from
anterograde amnesia. As a result he may have trouble remembering ________ a.
the name of the high school from which he graduated b. events that occurred
just before his accident c. names of people he just met
motivated forgetting is another name for a. repressionb. regressionc.
retroactive interference
flashbulb memories are _________ other long-term memories a. less vivid
and less accurate than b. more vivid and more accurate thanc. more vivid and
about the same level of accuracy as
the serial position effect occurs when people.a. remember the first things
in a list the bestb. remember the last things in a list the best c. remember
the first and last things in a list the best
regarding declarative memory, which of the following statements is FALSE?a.
declarative memory is a type of long-term memoryb. declarative memory is memory
of facts and personal informationc. declarative memories are recalled without
conscious effort
many people cannot say whether the doorknob is on the left or right side of
their front door. this is most likely due to c. retrograde amnesia d. encoding
failuree. the serial position effect
Eric Kandel studied the formation of memories in the a. garden slugb. sea
snailc. tree frog
sleep is important for which memory processc. maintenance rehearsald.
consolidation of short-term memories into long-term memoriese. holding material
in the eidetic engine
the levels-of-processing theory explains the a. interaction among the
components of working memoryb. organization of the semantic network memoryc.
superiority of elaborative rehearsal over maintenance rehearsal
a memory storage system that contains memory of impressions for a very
brief time (a few seconds or less) is called a. short-term memoryb. limited
memoryc. sensory memory
Proactive inference occurs when a. older memories interfere with newer
memories b. newer memories interfere with older memories c. more frequently
experienced events interfere with less frequently experienced events
the view that memory is based on recreating representations of the past
rather than recalled verbatim images of the past is called c. retrieval
theoryd. constructionist theorye. levels-of-processing theory
in memory, as time passes between learning and recall, c. the primary but
not the recency effect weakens d. the recency but not the primacy effect
weakense. the recency effect becomes stronger and the primacy effect weakens
the conversion of short-term memory into long-term declarative memory most
likely involves the a. hypothalamusb. hippocampusc. thalamus
which of the following psychologists is a leading expert on eyewitness
testimony?a. Baddeleyb. Loftusc. Lashley
the major role of genes in memory may be their ability to controla.
development of new neuronsb. which neurons diec. production of proteins
strengthening synaptic connections between neurons by repeated stimulation
is known as a. long-term potentiationb. short-term potentiationc. electroshock
therapy
____ are memory circuits in the brain that consist of complicated networks
of nerve cells.a. engramsb. retrievalc. memory schemas d. semantic networks e.
Neuronal networks
the capacity of short-term memory was investigated by c. Baddeleyd.
Millere. Tulving
Regarding episodic memory, which of the following statements is FALSE?a.
episodic memory is like a diary, holding memories of things that have happened
to the individual b. episodic memories are better remembered when regularly
retrieved and rehearsed c. episodic memory is a type of declarative memory
in a free recall task, and individual is asked ______.a. to recall as much
information as possible about a particular topic in any orderb. to recall a
series of items or numbers in a particular orderc. to recall pairs of items
that had been previously memorized
what is the order of processing in memory? a. storage, retrieval, encoding
b. storage, encoding, retrievalc. encoding. storage, retrieval
the idea that memory gradually disintegrates over time is the basis of a.
decay theoryb. interference theoryc. the semantic network model
your general world information (e.g., state capitals, U.S. presidents) is
store in a. episodic memoryb. semantic memoryc. prospective memory
in his studies of memory, Ebbinghaus found that ____ of the information
was lost by the end of the first day after studying, and that _____ of the
information was lost after a month had passedc. 33%; 80%d. 66%; 80%e. 66%; 99%
in memory encoding, mental picture is to ____ as meaning is to _____. c.
visual; auditoryd. visual; semantice. semantic; auditory
in contrast to maintenance rehearsal, elaborative rehearsal involvesc.
breaking down complex material into smaller piecesd. chunking informatione.
focusing on the meaning of the material
Grace knows how to tie a square knot and how to drive an automobile with a
standard transmission. These are examples of a. declarative memoryb. semantic
memoryc. procedural memory
the storage device of sensory memory is called the c. temporary storage
centerd. sensory registere. semantic network
which brain structure plays an important role in encoding fear and
anger?a. amygdalab. hippocampusc. hypothalamus
1.
|
______ is the system by which we retain information
and bring it to mind.
|
|
A)
|
Recall
|
|
B)
|
Cognition
|
|
C)
|
Learning
|
|
D)
|
Memory
|
|
E)
|
Perception
|
|
2.
|
After receiving a cute boy's cell phone number, Tammie
mentally repeats the number over and over in her head. This process converts
auditory signals into strings of recognizable sounds, and it is called
__________ encoding.
|
|
A)
|
vocal
|
|
B)
|
internal
|
|
C)
|
acoustic
|
|
D)
|
sub-auditory
|
|
E)
|
semantic
|
|
.
|
In memory encoding, mental picture is to _____ as
meaning is to _____.
|
|
A)
|
auditory; semantic
|
|
B)
|
auditory; visual
|
|
C)
|
visual; auditory
|
|
D)
|
visual; semantic
|
|
E)
|
semantic; auditory
|
|
4.
|
In sensory memory, auditory stimuli are to _____
memory as visual stimuli are to ______ memory.
|
|
A)
|
eidetic; iconic
|
|
B)
|
iconic; echoic
|
|
C)
|
echoic; iconic
|
|
D)
|
iconic; eidetic
|
|
E)
|
eidetic; echoic
|
|
5.
|
Mark's friends say he has a “photographic memory.” In
scientific terms, Mark's memory ability is described as
|
|
A)
|
iconic memory.
|
|
B)
|
eidetic imagery.
|
|
C)
|
immediate imagery.
|
|
D)
|
semantic memory.
|
|
E)
|
echoic memory.
|
|
6.
|
The “Magic 7” refers to the
|
|
A)
|
duration of sensory memory.
|
|
B)
|
capacity of short-term memory.
|
|
C)
|
capacity of sensory memory.
|
|
D)
|
duration of short-term memory.
|
|
E)
|
number of systems in the leading model of short-term
memory.
|
|
7.
|
Maintenance rehearsal is
|
|
A)
|
synonymous with chunking.
|
|
B)
|
consciously repeating information over and over again.
|
|
C)
|
connecting to-be-remembered information with
already-stored information.
|
|
D)
|
synonymous with whole rehearsal.
|
|
E)
|
picturing an object, pattern, or image in your mind.
|
|
8.
|
The process of converting unstable, short-term memory
into lasting, stable memories is called
|
|
A)
|
eidetic engineering.
|
|
B)
|
maintenance rehearsal.
|
|
C)
|
elaborative rehearsal.
|
|
D)
|
consolidation.
|
|
E)
|
chunking.
|
|
9.
|
Dreams that occur during REM sleep are important for
which memory process?
|
|
A)
|
Perception of sensory information in the sensory
register
|
|
B)
|
Formation of flashbulb memories
|
|
C)
|
Maintenance rehearsal
|
|
D)
|
Consolidation of short-term memories into long-term
memories
|
|
E)
|
Holding material in the eidetic engine
|
|
10.
|
Compared to short-term memory, long-term memory relies
|
|
A)
|
more on semantic coding and less on acoustic coding.
|
|
B)
|
more on visual coding and less on acoustic coding.
|
|
C)
|
about the same on acoustic coding.
|
|
D)
|
about the same on semantic coding.
|
|
E)
|
equally on acoustic, visual, and semantic coding.
|
|
11.
|
The semantic network model proposes a process called
______ in which thinking of a concept leads to a rippling effect that
triggers other related concepts.
|
|
A)
|
consolidation
|
|
B)
|
spreading activation
|
|
C)
|
neuronal networking
|
|
D)
|
long-term potentiation
|
|
E)
|
eidetic engineering
|
|
12.
|
The levels-of-processing theory explains the
|
|
A)
|
interaction among the components of working memory.
|
|
B)
|
organization of the semantic network model.
|
|
C)
|
superiority of elaborative rehearsal over maintenance
rehearsal.
|
|
D)
|
direction of spreading activation.
|
|
E)
|
process of consolidating memories during sleep.
|
|
13.
|
Declarative memory is also known as
|
|
A)
|
procedural memory.
|
|
B)
|
demonstrative memory.
|
|
C)
|
semantic memory.
|
|
D)
|
explicit memory.
|
|
E)
|
implicit memory.
|
|
14.
|
All of the following are categories of declarative
memory EXCEPT
|
|
A)
|
semantic.
|
|
B)
|
episodic.
|
|
C)
|
procedural.
|
|
D)
|
prospective.
|
|
E)
|
retrospective.
|
|
15.
|
Your general world information (e.g., state capitals,
|
|
A)
|
episodic memory.
|
|
B)
|
semantic memory.
|
|
C)
|
prospective memory.
|
|
D)
|
retrospective memory.
|
|
E)
|
short-term memory.
|
|
16.
|
Keiko knows that Salt Lake City is the capital of Utah
and that George Washington was the first president of the United States.
These are examples of
|
|
A)
|
procedural memory.
|
|
B)
|
declarative memory.
|
|
C)
|
historical memory.
|
|
D)
|
working memory.
|
|
E)
|
prospective memory.
|
|
17.
|
Semantic memory is most analogous to a(n)
|
|
A)
|
best-selling novel.
|
|
B)
|
diary.
|
|
C)
|
journal.
|
|
D)
|
day planner.
|
|
E)
|
encyclopedia.
|
|
18.
|
Procedural long-term memory might best be described as
|
|
A)
|
knowing when.
|
|
B)
|
knowing what.
|
|
C)
|
knowing how.
|
|
D)
|
knowing which.
|
|
E)
|
knowing that.
|
|
19.
|
Regarding implicit and explicit memory, which of the
following statements is TRUE?
|
|
A)
|
Implicit memory requires a conscious effort to recall,
while explicit memory does not.
|
|
B)
|
Explicit memory requires a conscious effort to recall,
while implicit memory does not.
|
|
C)
|
Both implicit and explicit memory require a conscious
effort to recall.
|
|
D)
|
Neither implicit nor explicit memory requires a
conscious effort to recall.
|
|
E)
|
Implicit memory requires a conscious effort to recall,
while explicit memory does not, but only for procedural memories.
|
|
20.
|
An organized knowledge structure reflecting one's past
experience and future expectations is called a
|
|
A)
|
stereotype.
|
|
B)
|
phonological loop.
|
|
C)
|
memory schema.
|
|
D)
|
semantic network.
|
|
E)
|
reconstructed memory.
|
|
21.
|
In a study reported in the text, African American
children were told stories in which light- and dark-complexioned African
American characters were associated with either positive or negative
attributes. When the children were asked to recall the stories, what
happened?
|
|
A)
|
The children remembered more stories in which the
light-complexioned characters had positive attributes and the
dark-complexioned characters had negative attributes.
|
|
B)
|
The children remembered more stories in which the
light-complexioned characters had negative attributes and the
dark-complexioned characters had positive attributes.
|
|
C)
|
The children preferred stories in which the
light-complexioned characters had positive attributes and the
dark-complexioned characters had negative attributes.
|
|
D)
|
The children preferred stories in which the
light-complexioned characters had negative attributes and the
dark-complexioned characters had positive attributes.
|
|
E)
|
The children were able to remember all stories equally
well, regardless of the attributes assigned to the characters.
|
|
22.
|
Flashbulb memories are __________ other long-term
memories.
|
|
A)
|
less vivid and less accurate than
|
|
B)
|
more vivid and more accurate than
|
|
C)
|
more vivid and about the same level of accuracy as
|
|
D)
|
less vivid and about the same level of accuracy as
|
|
E)
|
more vivid and less accurate than
|
|
23.
|
Flashbulb memories are most likely to be associated
with
|
|
A)
|
misinformation effects.
|
|
B)
|
recovered memories of early childhood abuse.
|
|
C)
|
emotionally-charged experiences.
|
|
D)
|
near death experiences.
|
|
E)
|
situations that are similar to the situation in which
the memory was first encoded.
|
|
24.
|
______ occurs when eyewitnesses are given incorrect
data during the retention interval of memory.
|
|
A)
|
The serial position effect
|
|
B)
|
Proactive interference
|
|
C)
|
The primacy effect
|
|
D)
|
Retroactive interference
|
|
E)
|
The misinformation effect
|
|
25.
|
Which of the following psychologists is a leading
expert on eyewitness testimony?
|
|
A)
|
Baddeley
|
|
B)
|
Loftus
|
|
C)
|
Lashley
|
|
D)
|
Kandel
|
|
E)
|
Miller
|
|
26.
|
Which of the following calls into question the
credibility of recovered memories of childhood abuse?
|
|
A)
|
Research showing that false memories can be created
under experimental conditions
|
|
B)
|
Research showing that people who claim to be abuse
victims tend to be dishonest
|
|
C)
|
Research showing that hypnosis always heightens
suggestibility to false memories
|
|
D)
|
Research showing that the misinformation effect played
a key role in several cases of false allegations
|
|
E)
|
The horrific nature of the memories
|
|
27.
|
In most cases, long-repressed memories of childhood
abuse come to light during
|
|
A)
|
dreams.
|
|
B)
|
hypnosis or psychotherapy.
|
|
C)
|
periods of relative calm.
|
|
D)
|
everyday life tasks.
|
|
E)
|
interviews with law enforcement personnel.
|
|
28.
|
Which statement best describes the current state of
opinion on recovered memories of childhood abuse?
|
|
A)
|
Most recovered memories of childhood abuse are
genuine, and these memories are credible sources of testimony in legal cases.
|
|
B)
|
Most recovered memories of childhood abuse are
genuine, but they are still not credible sources of testimony in legal cases.
|
|
C)
|
Most recovered memories of childhood abuse are false,
and they should not be considered a credible source of testimony in legal cases.
|
|
D)
|
Some recovered memories are genuine, whereas others
are false, and psychologists lack the tools to differentiate between them.
|
|
E)
|
Some recovered memories are genuine, whereas others
are false, and psychologists have now developed techniques that can reliably
distinguish between them.
|
|
29.
|
The idea that memory gradually disintegrates over time
is the basis of
|
|
A)
|
decay theory.
|
|
B)
|
interference theory.
|
|
C)
|
the semantic network model.
|
|
D)
|
retrieval theory.
|
|
E)
|
constructionist theory.
|
|
30.
|
In his studies of memory, Ebbinghaus found that ______
of the information was lost by the end of the first day after studying, and
that ______ of the information was lost after a month had passed.
|
|
A)
|
22%; 66%
|
|
B)
|
33%; 66%
|
|
C)
|
33%; 80%
|
|
D)
|
66%; 80%
|
|
E)
|
66%; 99%
|
|
31.
|
Proactive inference is when
|
|
A)
|
older memories interfere with newer memories.
|
|
B)
|
newer memories interfere with older memories.
|
|
C)
|
more frequently experienced events interfere with less
frequently experienced events.
|
|
D)
|
less frequently experienced events interfere with more
frequently experienced events.
|
|
E)
|
items in the middle of a list interfere with
memorizing the first and last items.
|
|
32.
|
While Althea was filling out a job application, memory
of her current address prevented her from accurately remembering her previous
address. This is an example of
|
|
A)
|
retrograde amnesia.
|
|
B)
|
anterograde amnesia.
|
|
C)
|
retroactive interference.
|
|
D)
|
proactive interference.
|
|
E)
|
the serial position effect.
|
|
33.
|
The serial position effect occurs when people
|
|
A)
|
remember the first things in a list the best.
|
|
B)
|
remember the last things in a list the best.
|
|
C)
|
remember the first and last things in a list the best.
|
|
D)
|
have difficulty remembering the first and last things
in a list.
|
|
E)
|
remember things they learn first better than things
they learn last.
|
|
34.
|
In memory processes, the primacy effect refers to
|
|
A)
|
inferior memory for items at the beginning of a list.
|
|
B)
|
inferior memory for items at the end of a list.
|
|
C)
|
superior memory for items at the end of a list.
|
|
D)
|
superior memory for items at the beginning of a list.
|
|
E)
|
superior memory for items at both the beginning and
end of the list.
|
|
35.
|
In memory, as time passes between learning and recall,
|
|
A)
|
both the primacy and recency effects weaken.
|
|
B)
|
neither the primacy nor the recency effects weaken.
|
|
C)
|
the primacy but not the recency effect weakens.
|
|
D)
|
the recency but not the primacy effect weakens.
|
|
E)
|
the recency effect becomes stronger and the primacy
effect weakens.
|
|
36.
|
To avoid interference effects on memory, your text
recommends all but which of the following?
|
|
A)
|
Study material directly before going to sleep.
|
|
B)
|
Practice or rehearse fresh memories aloud.
|
|
C)
|
Practice new memories beyond the point necessary to
reproduce them without error.
|
|
D)
|
Don't schedule your classes one right after another.
|
|
E)
|
Study material that is similar in content in
back-to-back fashion.
|
|
37.
|
When Louise told her friend about a book she had just
read, she was able to provide a lot of details about the last several pages.
This demonstrates the
|
|
A)
|
spaced practice effect.
|
|
B)
|
distributed practice effect.
|
|
C)
|
primacy effect.
|
|
D)
|
recency effect.
|
|
E)
|
massed versus spaced practice effect.
|
|
38.
|
Many people cannot say whether the doorknob is on the
left or right side of their front door. This is most likely due to
|
|
A)
|
proactive interference.
|
|
B)
|
retroactive interference.
|
|
C)
|
retrograde amnesia.
|
|
D)
|
encoding failure.
|
|
E)
|
the serial position effect.
|
|
39.
|
Repression was first proposed by
|
|
A)
|
Loftus.
|
|
B)
|
Freud.
|
|
C)
|
Miller.
|
|
D)
|
Baddeley.
|
|
E)
|
Ebbinghaus.
|
|
40.
|
All but which of the following are difficulties with
the concept of repression, as presented by Freud?
|
|
A)
|
Freud's concept of repression does not account for
ordinary forgetting.
|
|
B)
|
Many people who have been traumatized retain vivid,
fragmented memories of their experiences.
|
|
C)
|
Many victims of trauma have difficulty putting the
events out of their minds.
|
|
D)
|
Since repression operates unconsciously, it is almost
impossible to test scientifically.
|
|
E)
|
Today, most experts believe that repression does not
occur.
|
|
41.
|
In retrograde amnesia,
|
|
A)
|
new memories interfere with old.
|
|
B)
|
old memories interfere with new.
|
|
C)
|
new long-term memories cannot be formed.
|
|
D)
|
old long-term memories are lost.
|
|
E)
|
all memories are kept hidden from awareness.
|
|
42.
|
In anterograde amnesia, there is
|
|
A)
|
an inability to form new long-term memories.
|
|
B)
|
an inability to retrieve old long-term memories.
|
|
C)
|
a problem where new information interferes with old.
|
|
D)
|
a problem where old information interferes with new.
|
|
E)
|
a problem where all memories are kept hidden from
awareness.
|
|
43.
|
Describe three theories of forgetting.
|
|
44.
|
A physical trace of memory in the brain is termed a(n)
|
|
A)
|
flashbulb memory.
|
|
B)
|
schema.
|
|
C)
|
engram.
|
|
D)
|
mnemonic.
|
|
E)
|
neuronal network.
|
|
45.
|
The conversion of short-term memory into long-term
declarative memory most likely involves the
|
|
A)
|
hypothalamus.
|
|
B)
|
hippocampus.
|
|
C)
|
thalamus.
|
|
D)
|
medulla.
|
|
E)
|
brainstem.
|
|
46.
|
A device for improving memory is a(n)
|
|
A)
|
mnemonic.
|
|
B)
|
engram.
|
|
C)
|
consolidator.
|
|
D)
|
retrograde recaller.
|
|
E)
|
neuronal network.
|
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