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Presentation transcript:

Welcome to Who Wants to be a Millionaire 50:50 15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 Welcome to Who Wants to be a Millionaire 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 Which of the following is not one of the three basic human memory processes? 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 C 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: storage B: retrieval C: decoding D: encoding

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 Which one of the levels of processing would probably produce the weakest memory? 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 D 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: episodic B: phonemic C: semantic D: structural

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

Which of the memory stores can hold the least amount of information? 15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 Which of the memory stores can hold the least amount of information? 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 B 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: sensory B: working/short-term C: long-term D: the Apple store

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 The “cocktail party phenomenon” lends support to which model of selective attention? 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 C 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 B: intermediate selection A: early selection C: late selection D: self-referent selection

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 According to Paivio’s dual-coding theory memory is enhanced by forming which of these codes? 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 A 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: semantic and visual B: semantic and phonemic C: phonemic and structural D: self-referent and semantic

You’ve Reached the $1,000 Milestone! Congratulations! Congratulations!

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million Which part of Baddeley’s model of working memory encompasses the all of the older view of short-term memory? 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 B 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 B: phonological rehearsal loop A: episodic buffer C: visuospatial sketchpad D: executive control system

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million Which view of long-term memory sees factual memory as being organized into a multilevel classification system based on common properties of the information? 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 D 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: schema B: clustering C: connectionist D: conceptual hierarchy

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million Parallel distributed processing models assume that cognitive processes most resemble these networks? 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 C 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: semantic networks B: schematic networks D: serial processing networks C: neural networks

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million What best explains why most of you could not pick out the correct picture of the penny? 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 D 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: source monitoring B: reality monitoring C: retroactive interference D: pseudoforgetting

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million According to the encoding specificity principle, if the shape of the font of a printed word is stressed when it is learned, what would the best type of retrieval cue be? 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 B 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: semantic B: structural C: phonemic D: hierarchical

You’ve Reached the $32,000 Milestone! Congratulations!

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million The wording of a questions to eyewitnesses can alter their memories. Which explanation does Loftus use to explain this misinformation effect? 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 A 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: overwriting B: retroactive interference C: source monitoring D: decay theory

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 You first learn psychology terms, then learn sociology terms. When it’s time for your sociology test, you can only think of the psychology term. Of what is this an example? 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 D 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: source monitoring B: decay C: retroactive interference D: proactive interference

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million According to Baddeley, which part of working memory acts as an interface between long and short-term memory? 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 A 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: episodic buffer B: executive control C: phonological rehearsal loop D: visuospatial sketchpad

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million Which researchers devised the most influential information processing model that divides memory into three functionally different stores? 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 B 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: Sperling & Bower B: Atkinson & Shiffrin C: Craik & Lockhart D: Craik & Tulving

15 $1 Million 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 1 $100

15 $1 Million In which memory system does decay not seem to be a major cause of forgetting? 14 $500,000 13 $250,000 12 $125,000 11 $64,000 10 $32,000 9 $16,000 8 $8,000 7 $4,000 C 6 $2,000 5 $1,000 4 $500 3 $300 2 $200 50:50 1 $100 A: iconic B: short-term C: long-term D: echoic

YOU WIN $1 MILLION DOLLARS!