Crash Course Psychology 14 no ans PDF

Title Crash Course Psychology 14 no ans
Author Alicia Cho
Course Psychology
Institution University of California, Berkeley
Pages 1
File Size 119.2 KB
File Type PDF
Total Downloads 88
Total Views 136

Summary

crash course psychology collazos worksheet january...


Description

Remembering and Forgetting: Crash Course Psychology #14 Available at https://youtu.be/bSycdIx-C48 or just youtube/google “Crash Course Psychology 14” 1. Priming is activating associations non consciously. a. One type of priming is context-dependent memory. What example does Hank Green give to demonstrate this? Reading in bed you want to underline a quote but you don't have a pen.You get up, go to the other room and get a pen. But you get distracted and suddenly you're wondering why you're in the kitchen. When you retrace your steps and go back to bed you will remember why you got up/ b. State-dependent and mood-congruent memories are other examples of priming that show our states and our emotions can also serve as retrieval cues. 2. The serial position effect is our tendency to recall best the last and first items on a list.

3.

a. The first words are the primacy effect and the last words are the recency effect What are the three ways we can experience memory failure?

4. Proactive interference, or forward acting interference, is the disruptive effect of prior learning on the recall of new information. What example does Hank Green give for this concept? When you change one of your passwords but keep recalling the old one when trying to log in. 5. Retroactive interference, or backward acting interference, is the disruptive effect of new information on the recall of old information. Hank Green’s example is when you start studying Spanish and it interferes with remembering the French you’ve already learned. What’s an example of retroactive interference from your own life? When I was learning Spanish and Chinese right after each other, I would always jumble similar sounding words. 6. Hank talks about both the misinformation effect and source misattribution (aka source amnesia). These are both summarized by completing the following statement Hank reveals toward the end of the video: Misinformation effect is incorporating misleading information into one’s memory of an event. Source misattribution is forgetting or misrecalling the source of a memory. Memory is both a reconstruction and a reproduction of past events....


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