Term
What are the three types of memory? |
|
Definition
Episodic, Semantic, Procedural
ESP |
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Term
When you remember your first kiss, what type of memory are you using? |
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Definition
Episodic
An episodic memory is like an episode of your life. |
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Term
You know that CIA stands for Central Intelligence Agency, that April comes before May and that 8 · 8 = 64.
You know all of these things because of what type of memory? |
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Definition
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Term
What type of memory underlies our recollection of factual information and general knowledge about the world? |
|
Definition
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Term
What type of memory is associated with autobiographical events and their emotions? |
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Definition
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Term
When you build a fire, make bread or do the dishes, you are using what type of memory? |
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Definition
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Term
Our knowledge of how to preform certain tasks is dependent on what type of memory? |
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Definition
Procedural or Skill Memory |
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Term
How many types of memory are there, and how many do we use at a time? |
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Definition
There are three types of memory: episodic, semantic & procedural.
We may use them separately, or we may use any number of them at the same time. |
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Term
Samuel sits down to write an autobiographical essay. Which type of memory will he rely on most to do this? |
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Definition
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Term
What are the three basic memory processes? |
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Definition
Encoding
Storage
Retrieval |
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Term
Do the memory processes have to happen in a specific order? |
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Definition
Yes.
1st - Encoding
2nd - Storage
3rd - Retrieval |
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Term
What process(es) does effective memory depend on? |
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Definition
Effective memory depends on all three processes:
Encoding, Storage and Retrieval |
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Term
Incoming information is transformed into a mental representation. What process of memory making has occured? |
|
Definition
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Term
What process in memory making can work acoustically (via sound), semantically (via relational meaning) or visually (via image or icon e.g. language) |
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Definition
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Term
This kind of encoding is a specific type of encoding in which the meaning of something (a word, phrase, picture, event, whatever) is encoded as opposed to the sound or vision of it.
What is it? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the process of getting information into the memory system for storage and later retrieval called?
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Definition
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Term
If you find yourself talking or reading aloud while doing your homework, you are using what kind of encoding? |
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Definition
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Term
Repetition of words or putting information into a song or rhythm uses what kind of encoding?
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Definition
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Term
If you were presented with a list of words, each shown for one second, you would be able to remember if there was a word that was written in all capital letters, or if there was a word written in italics because of what type of encoding?
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Definition
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Term
Name the three basic memory processes in the order they must occur. |
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Definition
The three processes are 1. encoding, 2. storage and 3. retrieval. They always occur in that order. |
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Term
Which basic memory process(es) does effective memory depend on? |
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Definition
It depends on all three, encoding, storage and retrieval. |
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Term
During which of the basic memory processes can forgetting occur? |
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Definition
Forgetting can occur during any of the memory processes. |
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Term
Which memory process is responsible for keeping information in the brain over time. |
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Definition
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Term
What basic processes of memory term refers to the ability to retain information in the brain?
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Definition
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Term
What is the process in which information in your memory can be recalled?
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Definition
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Term
When we recall something and bring it into consciousness, what basic process of memory are we using? |
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Definition
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Term
How many stages of memory are there?
What are they? |
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Definition
3.
Sensory Memory
Short Term Memory
Long Term Memory |
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Term
Do the stages of memory have to occur in order?
If so, what order? |
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Definition
Yes ,they always occur in order.
1st - Sensory
2nd- Short Term
3rd - Long Term |
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Term
Working Memory is another name for what stage of memory? |
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Definition
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Term
Sensory Register is another name for what stage of memory? |
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Definition
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Term
What stage of memory is unlimited? |
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Definition
Sensory Memory
This was on the in-class review. It is a little confusing. We can take in an unlimited amount of sensory information, so sensory memory is unlimited. It's storage is unlimited, but it is not retained for long. |
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Term
How long is information held in our sensory memory? |
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Definition
an instant
(less than 2 seconds) |
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Term
What two things do we know about encoding of sensory memory?
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Definition
It's minimal, and purely sensory. |
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Term
How long is the storage of sensory memory?
What is the storage capacity for sensory memories? |
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Definition
Information is stored for less than two seconds.
We have an unlimited capacity for storage of sensory information (but only for two seconds)
IMAGINE: You go to an apartment for the first time. As you enter, you hear your friend calling you to come quickly.You run through one room to get to your friend. As you run, you can perceive everything in the room you pass through, the wood grain of the floor, the colors of the walls and ceiling, the shapes of the objects, smells, etc (unlimited capacaity) but (assuming you didn't see anything highly unusual) as you run into the next room you will not be able to recall what your senses perceived with much precision (storage less than two seconds). |
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Term
You're talking on the phone. You don't understand what the person you're talking to said and ask, "Could you say that again?" By the time you speak this question, you have realized what the person you were speaking to said. What is this phenomena called? What stage of memory does it occur in? |
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Definition
This is called after-image. It occurs in sensory memory. |
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Term
What accounts for our not noticing an absense, (or blacking out) of visual information when we blink? |
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Definition
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Term
What phenomena did this photograph capture?
What stage of memory does this phenomena occur in?
[image] |
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Definition
After image
After image occurs in sensory memory |
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Term
What do we call the momentary lingering of sensory information? |
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Definition
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Term
What do we know about the retrieval of sensory memory? |
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Definition
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Term
When we pay attention to selective sensory information for longer than two second, what occurs? |
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Definition
That information becomes part of our short term or working memory. |
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Term
What is the primary type of encoding utilized in short term memory formation? |
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Definition
Acoustic Encoding
(My notes actually say semantic, which is meaning, but that makes no sense and other places online say it's acoustic in short term and meaning or semantics in long term.
I'm going to try to ask her about this prior to the exam.) |
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Term
How long must a short term memory be rehearsed in order to enter Long Term Memory? |
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Definition
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Term
What is our storage capacity for short term memory? |
|
Definition
7 ± 2
7 chunks of information, plus or minus two.
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Term
Our short term memory can hold 7 ± 2 chunks of information.
What is a chunk of information? |
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Definition
A meaningful group of information |
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Term
What three process of memory occur during each stage of memory? |
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Definition
Encoding
Storage
Retrieval |
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Term
How long does unrehearsed information remain in short term memory? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the effect that explains why we can recall items from the end of a list? What stage of memory is this most prevalent in? |
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Definition
The Recency Effect
SHORT TERM MEMORY
(Because we saw or heard those items most recently) |
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Term
If we read a list of fifteen comparable items, are we most likely to forget the first 5, the last five or the 5 in the middle? |
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Definition
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Term
How can we keep information in short term memory? |
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Definition
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Term
What is the process by which we retrieve information stored in short term memory? |
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Definition
Serial Search
For example: You're driving and get lost. You pull over and ask someone for directions. They tell you a series of roads and turns to take. You say this information over to yourself to keep it in your short term memory. When you have taken two turns you realize you don't remember the third turn. (More than 20 secs have passed.) In order to recall it you go through the whole series of directions in your head. This is a serial search. It is conscious and, unlike sensory memory retrieval, it is not automatic. |
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Term
Imagine you are not opposed to using psychology to manipulate your friends. You are suggesting restaurants to go to. You list five similar choices. Where do you place the choice you hope your friends will select?
What effect explains why this is the best choice? |
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Definition
At the end of the list.
Recency Effect
(Having heard the last item most recently, the recency effect says this is the most likely item to be remembered.) |
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Term
What are the two causes of forgetting in short term memory? |
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Definition
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Term
What is it called when a memory fades automatically with time if not rehearsed? What stage of memory does this occur in?
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Definition
Decay
Decay happens ONLY in Short Term Memory.
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Term
What do we call it when new information displaces old information? What stages of memory does this occur in? |
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Definition
Interference
Interference occurs in BOTH
Short Term and Long Term Memory |
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Term
We learned that in short term memory our storage capacity is 7± 2 chunks of information. What happens when we are presented with more than 7 ± 2 chunks of information?
What is this called? |
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Definition
We will forget one of the previous chunks of information.
That information has been displaced by the new informaiton.
This is a form of interference. |
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Term
A mother takes her children on a trip to another state. She tells them, "Remember Exit 37". Instead of obeying, the children laugh and shout out many different numbers. What form of forgetting are the children trying to induce? |
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Definition
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Term
What is our relatively permenant storehouse of knowledge called? |
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Definition
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Term
What stage of memory does the primacy effect occur in? |
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Definition
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Term
The recency effect is to _________term memory,
as the primacy effect is to _________ term memory. |
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Definition
Short
Long
Recency effect is a phenomena of SHORT term memory
(*think RST, as in the alphabet Recency Short Term)
Primacy effect is a phenomena of LONG term memory
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Term
What is the phenomena that accounts for our ability to remember items from the beginning of a list?
What stage of memory does this occur in? |
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Definition
Primacy Effect
Long Term Memory
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Term
What do we call the phenomena whereby a violent or otherwise striking image is "burned" into one's memory?
What stage of memory does this image end up in?
Here is one example, the Pulitzer winning photograph taken by Nick Ut. The image had a major impact on the way Americans viewed our involvement in Vietnam. The girl in the center is screaming, on fire, her back burning with napalm. It's hard to forget this picture.
[image] |
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Definition
This is called FLASH BULB MEMORY
Even a short exposure can result in a long term memory. |
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Term
Who is more likely to have a photographic memory, a five year old or a twenty five year old? |
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Definition
A five year old
Our professor noted that children have photographic memories. Most research states that a true photographic memory is rare, and may not actually exist. Evidence suggests that what we think of as photographic memory, is more common in children. |
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Term
What two types of rehearsal help information to become encoded in memory? |
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Definition
Maintenance Rehearsal
Elaborative Rehearsal |
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Term
What type of rehearsal involves repeating information over and over? |
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Definition
Maintenance or Rote Rehearsal |
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Term
What type of rehearsal is most effective for long term memory? |
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Definition
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Term
Students who are learning the order of operations in math are often told to remember this phrase: "Please Excuse My Dear Aunt Sally."
This is an example of what strategy of improving memory? |
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Definition
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Term
What type of rehearsal involves thinking about how new material is related to already stored information? |
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Definition
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Term
You need to remember the term "neuron." In order to permanently commit the term and meaning to your memory, you look up what it means (it is a nerve cell), find out its purpose (transmit information from or to the central nervous system), look at a diagram and study its parts, and think about how it relates to things that you already know (like how different it its from other kinds of cells). You go through this process several times. What memory encoding process are you using? |
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Definition
Elaborative Rehearsal
You elaborated on the information that you needed to learn. This made meaningful connections in the brain that improve retention. |
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Term
What stage of memory has the greatest storage capacity. |
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Definition
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Term
What is the primary, non-physiological, reason we forget long term memories? |
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Definition
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Term
An English speaking student learning Spanish has difficulty remembering to change the article "los" to "las" when using it with feminine nouns. A Russian speaking student of English has trouble remembering to use the English articles "a" "an" and "the" because these do not exist in Russian. What has caused their forgetting? |
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Definition
Interference
Their past knowledge is interfering with their ability to remember new rules. |
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Term
What do we call the cues that help us to recall and recognize information ? |
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Definition
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Term
Which is easier, recognizing information you've seen before, or recalling information that you're seen before? |
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Definition
Recognition is easier than recall |
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Term
An essay test requires information recall, while a multiple choice test requires information __________. |
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Definition
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Term
What do we call the self-awareness of memory that has important implications for how people learn? |
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Definition
Metamemory
Meta means self
metaomemory is the self awareness of how one's memory works, or doesn't work. |
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Term
I know that I remember events in history better if I can attach them to individual people effected by them. When I study westward expansion, I read diaries of people who travelled the Oregon Trail.
My knowledge of how I learn and remember is an example of what? |
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Definition
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Term
What do we call devices such as rhymes or word clues that aids in memory? |
|
Definition
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Term
|
Definition
The definition in our notes reads - "putting info into the context of something familiar".
This might be misleading because mnemonic is not a verb. A definition that makes a little more sense with the examples that were used in class is:
ANY LEARNING TECHNIQUE THAT AIDS IN INFORMATION RETENTION.
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Term
A woman can't recall what she walked into a room to get. She goes back to the room she was in. Is she trying to utilize context or state dependent memory? |
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Definition
Context Dependent Memory
(The context in this case is the location) |
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Term
A man is travelling and sleeping in a different city every night. One night, tired, he lies doewn to leep and finds that he suddenly remembers his dream from the night before. What type of dependent memory is responsible? |
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Definition
State dependent memory.
(His tiredness is the state in this situation. Because he is travelling we can rule out the location as a factor.) |
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Term
A student who has studied in the library every night, gets a take home test. Should the student take the test home to complete it or complete it in the library? |
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Definition
In the library
(because of context dependent memory.) |
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Term
What do we call the list memorization method that requires the user to commit an initial rhyme to memory? |
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Definition
Peg Word System
Here is a definition from wikipedia: A Peg system is a technique for memorizing lists. It works by pre-memorizing a list of words that are easy to associate with the numbers they represent (1 to 10, 1-100, 1-1000, etc.). Those objects form the "pegs" of the system. Then in the future, to rapidly memorize a list of arbitrary objects, each one is associated with the appropriate peg. Generally, a peglist only has to be memorized one time, and can then be used over and over every time a list of items needs to be memorized.
(Who memorizes lists of arbitrary objects, I have no idea.) |
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Term
A man who needs to remember to purchase a bag of onions, butter and 3 dozen eggs imagines his childhood home. He imagines that when he opens the front door, onions coming tumbling out. Then he imagines going down the hall and slipping on some butter his mom is using to polish the floor. From there he imagines going into the kitchen where three chickens are each sitting on a dozen eggs on the counter. What mnemonic device is he using? |
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Definition
Method of loci
Loci is plural for locus, which means place or location in Latin.
This is a method which works by associating the things to be recall with a specific location |
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Term
A girl has memorized a list of words that rhyme with sounds.
ONE. Gun
TWO. Blue
THREE. Sea
etc.
Now she must memorize the presidents of the United States in order. To begin with Washington and, Adams she imagines someone with a gun has shot through Washington's face on a dollar bill. For Adams she pictures someone choking. Their adam's apple has turned blue. etc
What is this mnemonic device called? |
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Definition
Peg Word System
(it's not necessarily so morbid) |
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Term
What does SQ3R stand for and what is it used for? |
|
Definition
SQ3R stands for:
Survey
Question
Read
Record
Review
- The SQ3R method is used to understand and remember textbook material .
(note that the three Rs are in alphabetical order)
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Term
What part of the SQ3R method involves looking for answers to questions you have about the material? |
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Definition
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Term
What part of the SQ3R method invovles getting an overview of the chapter's organization, layout and content? |
|
Definition
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Term
Which part of the SQ3R method involves taking notes on the main ideas of each section |
|
Definition
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Term
Which part of the SQ3R method may take the form of a query about each heading? |
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Definition
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Term
Which part of the SQ3R method invovles answering the questions you formed while reading? |
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Definition
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|
Term
True or False: A lecture is the best way to teach. |
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Definition
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Term
Name 4 reasons that lectures are not the best way to teach. |
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Definition
1. Exceeds attention span
2. Teacher dominates
3. Most information is forgotten
4. Taking notes interferes with thinking and understanding |
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Term
What term describes the critical period in which over 1/2 of a lecture is forgotten in 24 hours? |
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Definition
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Term
According to our notes on how to take notes, what 4 things does active listening aim to give a student? |
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Definition
1. Better Retention
2. Longer Attention
3. Immediate understanding
4. Notes for later study
RAIN |
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Term
According to our notes on how to take notes, what two things can one do to prepare for lectures? |
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Definition
Read the chapter before class
Review last lecture notes before class |
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Term
What are some techniques to retain lecture information that can be used during the course of the lecture?
List as many of the five as you can. |
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Definition
1. Write main ideas and some detail
2. Listen for clues about what's most important
3. Ask questions
4. Leave column of 2.5" on left margin
5. Use only front of page |
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Term
According to our handout, what should be done immediately following lecture to increase information retention? |
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Definition
Use the left hand 2.5" column for key recall words.
REVIEW by RECITING the meaning of the notes and testing RECALL. |
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Term
Who designed the first intelligence test?
[image] |
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Definition
Alfred Binet
a french psychologist |
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|
Term
Who designed the first IQ (or Intelligence Quotient) test? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Is intelligence culturally specific? |
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Definition
Yes
HOWEVER:
Africa is a huge, diverse continent that has nearly 500 universities, none of which administer an intelligence test involving spears. The notion that people in Africa are running around with spears and equate intelligence with hunting is not only very inaccurate, it's a stereotype that perpetuates other harmful stereotypes that make our country ignorant and ethnocentric.
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Term
When was the first intelligence test developed and what was the goal of it? |
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Definition
It was developed in 1904 in France to identify children who needed special schooling. |
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Term
What term do we use to describe the age level at which a person functions mentally or intellectually?
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|
Definition
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Term
A child of 7 is given a number of questions. All of the questions are answered correctly by "average" 10 year olds. The child gets all of the answers correct. When asked the questions for eleven year olds, the child gets one question wrong.
What is the child's mental age?
What is the child's IQ according to the Stanford Binet system? |
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Definition
Mental age = 10
Chronological Age = 7
MA x 100 = IQ
CA
10/7 x 100 = 143
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Term
What is the formula we learned to determine an IQ score? |
|
Definition
Mental Age x 100 = IQ
Chronological Age
example:
mental age = 4
chronological age = 3
4/3 x 100 = 133
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Term
What three areas of intelligence do IQ test in this country generally measure? |
|
Definition
Verbal Intelligence
Practical Intelligence
Problem Solving Ability |
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Term
What area of intelligence is not measured on IQ tests, but is important to a layperson's assessment of someone else's intelligence? |
|
Definition
Social Competence
(knowing how to act and interact in social situations) |
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Term
Why is the Standford-Binet called the Standford-Binet when Terman is creditted with it?[image] |
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Definition
It was made at Stanford University by Terman, who was inspired by Binet's test, which he translated and revised, hence the name.
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Term
Does IQ change as age increases? |
|
Definition
Nope
(well, at least not in theory) |
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Term
|
Definition
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|
Term
Culturally fair test would use what instead of words? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
When were the Wechsler Intelligence Scales first used?
What distinguishes them from the Stanford Binet test? |
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Definition
The Wechsler Intelligence Scale was first used in 1949.
It is distinguished by the fact it uses sub-tests for verbal and preformative tasks. A cumulative score is given as well as separate scores for each sub-test. |
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Term
What 2 subtests does the Wechsler Intelligence Scale provide? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
When the original Wechsler Intelligence Scale was revised what three test resulted? Who took each? |
|
Definition
WISC- R : Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children - Revised
(5-15 years old)
WAIS -R : Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale- Revised
(for adults)
WPPSI- Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence
(for children ages 4-6) |
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Term
What two factors are good measures of a test's reliability?
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|
Definition
- Gives the same score as other tests which aim to measure the same capacity.
- Gives the same results over time.
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Term
If a test is reliable, giving the same result as similar tests, and the same results over time, does it follow that the test has validity? |
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Definition
Nope.
A test can be reliable but invalid
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Term
SAT scores were intended to predict how well a student would do in college; they do not.
Is the SAT
A. Not valid
B. Not Reliable
Why? |
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Definition
A. Not Valid
If a test does not measure what it is suppossed to measure (future success in college in this case) then it is not valid. |
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Term
Can enriching one's environment effect change in one's IQ score? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
True or False: Heredity, not environment determines IQ scores? |
|
Definition
False. Both play a role in IQ scores |
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|
Term
Identical twins raised apart have similar or different IQ scores? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What is the order of classifications of mental retardation from highest functioning to lowest?
List the corresponding IQ scores. |
|
Definition
Anything below 70 is considered retarded.
Mild: 50-70
Moderate: 35-49
Severe: 20-34
Profound: below 20
The top group has a range of 20.
The middle groups have a range of 14.
The lowest group has no lower limit.
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|
Term
What do we call the ability to produce original or novel objects ideas or solutions? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
Do typical IQ tests measure convergent or divergent thinking? |
|
Definition
Convergent Thinking
[image] |
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|
Term
Does creativity generally involve more convergent or divergent thinking? |
|
Definition
Divergent Thinking
[image] |
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|
Term
What is the correlation between intelligence and creativity? |
|
Definition
There is a low correlation between intelligence and creativity
|
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|
Term
Which of the following statements is true:
- Creativity and intelligence are not connected.
- You have to have some intelligence to be creative.
- The more intelligent you are the more creative you are.
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|
Definition
2.
You have to have some intelligence to be creative. |
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|
Term
Which theory of motivation argues that we have a genetically predetermined disposition to respond in a particular way when confronted with specific stimuli? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Theorist who reject the instinct theory and say that people have no instincts, say that people have 3 reflexes that promote our survival.
What are those reflexes? |
|
Definition
Sucking
Grasping
Rooting
[image] |
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|
Term
What are the two main arguments against the Instinct Theory? |
|
Definition
It does not account for learned behaviors.
It is not testable. |
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|
Term
What theory of motivation sees biological homeostasis as our primary motivator? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
What do we call the equilibrium the body strives to maintain via internal and external adjustments? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
According to drive reduction theory, what is the basis of all behavior? |
|
Definition
Physiological need
It is the NEED that DRIVES the BEHAVIOR
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|
Term
In drive reduction theory, a physical need results in an imblance that results in a ___________ drive.
|
|
Definition
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|
Term
In drive reduction theory, what moves an organism to meet their need through behavior? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
In drive reduction theory, what is the motivation for behavior? |
|
Definition
|
|
Term
According to Drive Reduction Theory what comes first, psychological drives, physiological needs or behaviors? |
|
Definition
Physiological need
It is the NEED that DRIVES the BEHAVIOR |
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|
Term
Name three problems with drive reduction theory. |
|
Definition
If our main motivation is to reduce arousal and return to homeostasis
1. Why are there people who act to increase arousal?
2. Why do we continue the behavior once the need is fulfilled?
3. Social, cultural and gender factors influence the way we respond to our needs and drives.
[image] |
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Term
What theory of motivation states that we have a general level of arousal and that sometimes we are motivated to increase that arousal, and sometimes we are motivated to decrease it? |
|
Definition
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|
Term
Which theory of motivation is considered "opposite" to the drive reduction theory? |
|
Definition
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Which theory of motivation accounts for the fact that sometimes one feels like climbing a mountain and sometimes one feel like sitting down and reading a novel? |
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Which theory of motivation focuses on the role of external factors in motivation? |
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Which theory of motivation embraces an understanding of behavior motivated by positive and negative reinforcement? |
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Which theory of motivation is associated with operant conditioning? |
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Definition
Incentive Theory
(an incentive is a kind of reinforcement) |
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If someone were to promise you a $100 to ace this test, what theory of motivation would they be using? |
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According to Abraham Maslow, what kinds of needs must be fulfilled before the pursuit of any other needs will take place.[image] |
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Hunger, Thirst, Sex, Sleep, Rest, Exercise, Elimination, Pain Avoidance, and Oxygen Consumption are all examples of what kind of need?
Where are these needs in Maslow's hierarchy of needs?
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Definition
These are all physiological needs.
They are at the very bottom of Maslow's hierarchy of needs. |
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- Shelter, protection from immediate and future danger, and protection from psychological and economic harm are needs from what level of Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs?
- According to Maslow, what need must be fulfilled before these needs will be addressed
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Definition
- These are from the Safety Needs level of Maslow's Hierarchy.
- This is the second level, just above physiological needs, which must be fulfilled first.
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Term
List the 5 needs described in Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs from bottom (or basic needs), to top. |
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Definition
1. Physiological
2. Safety
3. Social
4. Esteem
5. Self Actualization
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Term
At what level of Maslow's hierarchy of needs does one have an acceptance of self and others, behave creatively, and identify with the problems of humanity?
Where is this in the pyramid |
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Definition
Self actualization
This is the very top of the pyramid |
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Term
When someone is developing competence, knowledge, status and respect, they are what level of Maslow's Hierarchy?
Where is this level in relationship to the top of the pyramid? |
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Definition
Self Esteem (or Esteem)
This is the second from the top, just below self actualization |
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Term
Once one's physiological and safety needs are fulfilled, what need, according to Maslow's hierarchy of needs, is next to be addressed?
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Definition
Social or Belonging needs are fulfilled after physiological and safety needs.
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Term
If someone is pursing love and affection, associations with others and affiliations, what needs can you assume they have met? What level of Maslow's hierarchy are they on? |
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Definition
They have had their physiological and safety needs met and are on the belonging or social level of Maslow's hierarchy. |
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Term
In our lifetime, does one usually move up and down Maslow's hierarchy of needs or progress upwards uninterrupted? |
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Definition
We move up and down according to circumstances in our life and our abilities. |
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What level in Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs is rarely attained? |
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Definition
Self Actualization, the top level |
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What part of the brain controls hunger?
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Which eating disorder is commonly believed to be motivated by a desire for control, independence and assertiveness in someone who does not have these qualties ? |
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Many people with what eating disorder do not realize that their behavior is abnormal? |
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Definition
Anorexia Nervosa
This is rather debatable. |
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What is the cure rate for anorexia nervosa? |
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Definition
70%
(Most sources put the figure lower (50 %- 60%). AN has the highest mortality rate of all mental illness.) |
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Which eating disorder is characterized by dramatic weight loss? |
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Definition
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Which eating disorder is said to give those affected a sense of control over their lives via control of their food? |
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Definition
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What mental illness is associated with a fear of being overweight? |
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What mental illness is categorized by cycles of gorging and self induced vomiting or over use of laxatives? |
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Definition
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Those effected by which eating disorder are said to be responding to their feelings or tension, boredom, lonesomeness and anxiety? |
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Definition
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Those with which eating disorder are subject to esophagal burns and erosion of tooth enamel, as well as poor nutritional status? |
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Definition
Bulimia
I knew a dancer once, an older man who had been in the ballet his whole life. He said that the dance school he was teaching at had to have the plumbing replaced continually because bulimia was so pervasive. The acid from the vomit destroyed the pipes. |
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Those effected by which eating disorder are more often of normal weight? |
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When we must choose between 2 incompatible but equally appealing options we are having what kind of conflict? |
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Definition
Approach-Approach Conflict
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Term
I am tried of writing notes, but I also want to finish them and feel prepared for the test. What kind of conflict am I having? |
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Definition
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One event or situation has both positive and negative aspects to it. A man wants to work out to feel energized but he also doesn't feel he has the energy to work out. What kind of conflict is this? |
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Definition
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I have two incompatible but equally appealing options. I would like to go outside and walk in the forest, but I would also like to make dinner for my family. What kind of conflict am I having? |
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Definition
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I have two incompatible, equally unappealing options. I do not want to drop the course I'm doing poorly in, but I also don't want a poor grade to bring my GPA down. What kind of conflict am I having? |
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