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AP Psych - Language Flashcards

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9265493644CognitionThe process of taking in information, processing and storing it, and applying it.0
9265493645SchemaA conceptual framework a person uses to make sense of the world; a folder or category in someone's mind.1
9265493646ObjectsEverything in a schema.2
9265493647PrototypeThe thing that most accurately represents your schema.3
9265493648PropositionsA declarative sentence about your schema or something in it.4
9265493649AssimulationAssuming something belongs in a schema based on prior knowledge. (All birds have feathers so every creature with feathers must belong in the birds schema.)5
9265493650AccommodationAdding something new to a schema and changing the definition of that schema based on new knowledge. (Believing only fish swim and then seeing a penguin swim and learning it's a bird so changing your definition of bird and fish.)6
9265493651HueristicsProblem solving method that usually gives us a reasonably correct answer quickly, such as a rule of thumb.7
9265493652Insight ThinkingWhen you stop focusing on a problem and the answer suddenly pops into your head.8
9265493653AlgorithmsMethods of answering a question that guarantees you'll get the right answer.9
9265493654Representative HeuristicHelps us make decisions based on how closely something resembles a prototype.10
9265493655Availibility HeuristicMaking decisions based on what's most available or vivid in your mind.11
9265493656Inductive ReasoningA type of logic in which generalizations are based on a large number of specific observations.12
9265493657Deductive ReasoningA type of logic in which specific results are predicted from a general premise.13
9265493658Confirmation BiasA tendency to search for information that confirms one's preconceptions.14
9265493659Mental SetThe tendency to respond to a new problem in the manner used for a previous problem.15
9265493660Functional FixednessThe tendency to perceive an item only in terms of its most common use.16
9265493661FramingThe way an issue is posed; how an issue is framed can significantly affect decisions and judgments.17
9265493662OverconfidenceTendency to overestimate our ability to make correct predictions.18
9265493663Belief BiasThe tendency for one's preexisting beliefs to distort logical reasoning.19
9265493664Hindsight BiasThe tendency to believe, after learning an outcome, that one would have foreseen it.20
9265493665Belief PerseveranceTendency to stick to our initial beliefs even when evidence contradicts them.21
9265493666PhonemesIn language, the smallest distinctive sound unit.22
9265493667MorphemesThe smallest units of meaning in a language.23
9265493668SyntaxSentence structure24
9265493669GrammarA set of rules that specify how the units of language can be combined to produce meaningful messages.25
9265493670SemanticsMeaning of words and sentences.26
9265493671PragmaticsWays of communicating meaning other than words. (Body language, tone, etc.)27
92654936723 Stages of Baby SpeechBabbling (sounds without meaning) from 2 - 6 months, one word speech from 6 - 18 months, telegraphic speech (2 words, grammatically correct) from 18 months to 3 years.28
9265493673Surface StructureIn language, the sound and order of words.29
9265493674Deep StructureThe underlying meaning of a sentence.30
9265493675Critical Period for Human Language LearningFirst three years of a person's life; if language isn't learned during this period, it will never be learned.31
9265493676Whorf's Linguistic Determinism TheoryThe language(s) you speak determine how you think, because you think in the same structure you speak in.32
9265493677ChomskyDeveloped the theory of innate grammar.33
9265493678EbbinghausDeveloped the forgetting curve and learning curve.34
9265493679KohlerContributed to Gestalt theory.35
9265493680LoftusResearched malleability of the human brain.36
9265493681MillerThe magic number 7; our short term memory can only store 7 pieces of information at a time.37
9265493682IntelligenceAll of the things that we do when we're thinking, planning, judging, and deciding, AND how well we do it. The ability to take in information, process it, and produce an output (ex: a decision, an idea, a paper, etc).38
9265493683BinetDeveloped the idea of an intelligence quotient, using your mental and chronological age.39
9265493684TermanAmericanized Binet's IQ test, creating the Stanford-Binet Intelligence Test. Creates bell curve with the mean at 100 and a standard deviation of 15.40
9277736174Spearman's G FactorThe general intelligence underlying someone's ability to perform or do a wide variety of tasks.41
9277736175SavantsPeople of low intelligence who have an extraordinary ability. Spearman's G Factor doesn't apply to them.42
9277736176Gardner's Multiple IntelligencesLinguistic, Logical-Mathematical, Musical, Bodily-Kinesthetic, Spatial-Visual, Interpersonal, Intrapersonal.43
9277736177Linguistic IntelligenceAbility to understand words and language.44
9277736178Logical-Mathematical IntelligenceAbility to understand logical reasoning and problem solving; math, science, patterns, sequences.45
9277736179Musical IntelligenceAbility to create, synthesize, or perform music.46
9277736180Bodily-Kinesthetic IntelligenceAbility to control one's body movements and handle objects skillfully.47
9277736181Spatial-Visual IntelligenceAbility to perceive or create things spatially or visually.48
9277736182Interpersonal IntelligenceAbility to understand and interact effectively with others.49
9277736183Intrapersonal IntelligenceAbility to be aware of and understand yourself.50
9277736184Components of Sternberg's Conception of IntelligenceAnalytical, creative, and practical.51
9277736185Conception of Intelligence: AnalyticalThe intelligence we use to solve problems that have a single correct answer.52
9277736186Conception of Intelligence: CreativeThe intelligence we use to look for multiple correct answers to solve problems.53
9277736187Conception of Intelligence: PracticalThe intelligence we use to solve the problems of every day life.54
9277736188Cattell's 2 Kinds of IntelligenceFluid intelligence and concrete intelligence.55
9277736189Fluid IntelligenceThe ability to take in information really quickly and make decisions based off of what information you're getting. Works quickly. Younger people are much better at working with their fluid intelligence.56
9277736190Concrete IntelligenceThe accumulated knowledge that you've gained over your lifetime. Older people are much better at working with their concrete intelligence.57
92777361914 Components of Emotional IntelligenceAbility to percieve emotions (in ourselves & in others), to understand emotions, to manage one's emotions, and to use emotions.58
9277736192Divergent ThinkingSearching for new ways to solve a problem.59
9277736193Convergent ThinkingNarrowing down a list of alternatives to converge on a single correct answer.60
9277736194Five Preconditions of CreativityExpertise (skill in your field), imagination, personality (contentiousness and openness), intrinsic motivation (self motivation), and an encouraging and providing environment.61
9278182801Perceptual SpeedHow quickly you can take in information.62
9278182802Neurological SpeedHow quickly you process information.63
9278182803WechslerCreated WAIS (Wechsler Adult Intelligence Skill) - study personal strengths and weaknesses in 11 different subjects.64
9278182804Aptitude TestA test designed to determine one's capacity to learn.65
9278182805Achievement TestA test designed to assess what a person has learned.66
9278182806Normed TestA test scored on a bell/normal curve.67
9278182807Renorming/Restandardizing a TestAdjusting the bell curve to follow any changes in the mean of a test.68
9278182808Reliability in a TestConsistency. If you give two groups of similar students the same test, they should get very similar scores; if you give one group of students two similar tests, they should get very similar scores. If they do, your test is reliable.69
9278182809Content ValidityThe extent to which a test samples the behavior that is of interest. (Testing what it is reported to test; a written driving test wouldn't have content validity because it doesn't test your actual skills at driving.)70
9278182810Predictive ValidityThe success with which a test predicts the behavior it is designed to predict. (The SAT is supposed to predict your success in college.)71
9278182811Concurrent ValidityA way of measuring the validity of one test through comparison of another test that has validity; if they are similar, the test has concurrent validity.72
9278182812GaltonDarwin's cousin who believed intelligence is inherited and was interested in individual differences.73
9278182813GardnerDeveloped theory of multiple intelligences.74
9278182814SpearmanDeveloped g factor75
9278182815SternbergCreated his three conceptions of intelligences (analytical, creative, and practical).76

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