PSYCH203 // WK3&4 // PT4

A picturesque illustration of a brain filled with various memory cues, names, and faces, with a scientific notebook in the foreground, vibrant colors, educational theme.

Memory and Perception Quiz

Test your knowledge on memory, perception, and the psychology behind how we recall names and faces. This engaging quiz will challenge your understanding of key concepts and theories in the field of cognitive psychology.

Participate and discover:

  • The intricacies of memory recall
  • How stereotypes influence our perceptions
  • The validity of eyewitness accounts
17 Questions4 MinutesCreated by AnalyzingMind42
Names are store separately, in the '.....' hemisphere
Right
Left
Cake
None of the above
Anomia is the inability to recall what?
Proper names
Food
Songs
Relationships between things
Misinformation Effect: Loftus and her colleagues have conducted more than 200 experiments involving over 20,000 individuals that document how exposure to '...................' causes '..................' '................'
Cake, wide eyes
Misinformation, memory distortion
Real information, memory loss
Replication, accurate memory
- Exposing young children to stereotypes affects their memory. -Young children are very suggestible witnesses. Are these statements true or false?
True
False
First statement true, second statement false
When new information modifies/overwrites old information, it is called what?
Copyright
Highlighting
Substitution
Modification
The failure to discriminate the source of information is called what?
Source monitoring
Failure to discriminate
Source failure
Discrimination failure
We recognize people, not their faces, this is called the....
Person effect
Wolf effect
Mustache effect
Little red riding hood effect
The theory where original information is never stored, post-event information is inserted into the vacant slot. This is called...?
Post-event slot
Vacant slot
Original information blank
Cake
The theory where both memories are stored, but the most recent is usually recalled, we call this:
Double-memory
Twin-memory
Co-existence
Co-dependence
The theory where original information is forgotten, so you choose the most recent information, this is called
Response bias
Vacant slot
Bias to new information
Response confusion
The theory where both memories stored, and you recall what you think is wanted is called...
Demand characteristics
Response bias
Co-existence
Vacant slot
Recognition memory for faces, voices, & names is good, but a high rate of ...... ............
Wrong answers
Confused answers
True negatives
False positives
Eyewitnesses are better at identifying people their own age and own race
True
False
Faces with a stereotypic criminal appearance are remembered better and identified more often than other faces in police lineups. This is called
Discrimination bias
Criminal Face bias
Stereotypical bias
Experience bias
- memories recovered in therapy must be taken seriously. - “false” memories are rare. - to doubt the memory is to betray children and support abusers. These are descriptions of which 'camp'?
Recovered Memory Camp
Pseudomemory Camp
False-memory Camp
Truthful Memory Camp
-memories recovered in therapy should be viewed skeptically. -“false” memories can be manufactured by naïve/unscrupulous therapists. -There have been many false accusations. These are descriptions of which 'camp'?
Recovered Memory Camp
False-memory Camp
Truthful Memory Camp
Pseudomemory Camp
 
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