Imagine you are reminiscing about a vacation you took to a beautiful coastal city last year. You recall specific details such as the stunning beach where you watched the sunset, the delicious seafood dinner you enjoyed at a local restaurant, and the historic lighthouse you visited. This process involves explicit memory, where you consciously retrieve facts and personal experiences. You remember not only the visual beauty of the places but also the emotions and sensations associated with them, like the feel of the sand between your toes and the taste of the fresh seafood.

Psych unit 2 memory quiz

Quiz
•
Health Sciences
•
9th - 12th Grade
•
Easy

Vanessa Yang
Used 2+ times
FREE Resource
11 questions
Show all answers
1.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Explicit memory
Echoing memory
Implicit memory
Iconic memory
2.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Consider the experience of learning to play a musical instrument, such as the guitar. Initially, forming basic chords is challenging, and the movements feel awkward. Every practice session demands intense focus, with progress seeming slow. However, with regular practice, the brain undergoes a physiological process known as long-term potentiation (LTP). This involves the strengthening of synapses, the connections between neurons, which become more efficient through repeated use. As these neural pathways strengthen, forming chords and transitioning between them during a song becomes almost automatic. The movements that once required deliberate effort now occur smoothly and with less conscious thought.
3.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Imagine recalling the day of your graduation. You vividly remember walking across the stage, hearing your name called, and the feeling of accomplishment mixed with excitement. You also remember specific details like the weather being unusually sunny for that time of year, wearing the ceremonial gown and cap, and seeing your family cheering from the audience.This type of memory involves episodic memory, where you recall personal experiences that occurred at a particular time and place, complete with the emotions and sensations associated with them.
4.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Imagine sitting down at a computer to write an email. As you compose your message, your fingers automatically move to the correct keys without you needing to look at the keyboard or consciously think about where each letter is located. This skill involves implicit memory, which includes the automatic procedures and motor skills you've acquired over time. Typing on a keyboard becomes a procedural memory that operates below the level of conscious awareness, allowing you to focus on what you're writing rather than on the act of typing itself. This type of memory shows how repeated practice can lead to automaticity in tasks, making them efficient and seemingly effortless, essential for performing complex activities that require multitasking.
5.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Imagine you're heading to the grocery store and you decide not to write down your shopping list. Instead, you mentally repeat
"milk, eggs, bread" several times as you grab your keys and head out the door. This process of repeating the items over and over is a form of maintenance rehearsal, a strategy you use to keep this short list active in your immediate memory during the drive to the store. By continuously verbalizing or thinking about these items, you maintain their presence in your short-term memory, ensuring you remember to pick them up once you reach the grocery aisles.
6.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Imagine the routine drive home from work, a route you have traveled countless times. This journey involves automatic processing, where you navigate the familiar roads, make turns, and respond to traffic signals without conscious thought. Your mind may even wander to other concerns of the day while your body automatically performs the task of driving. This type of processing allows you to perform tasks efficiently with minimal cognitive effort, relying on the brain's ability to handle familiar actions through learned motor patterns.
Automatic processing
7.
MULTIPLE CHOICE QUESTION
30 sec • 1 pt
Imagine you need to remember a long phone number or a string of numerical data. Instead of trying to remember each individual digit, which can be overwhelming and prone to errors, you use the technique of chunking. By breaking down the long sequence into smaller, manageable groups, such as dividing a 10-digit phone number into segments of three, three, and four digits, you create easier-to-remember chunks. This method leverages your brain's ability to handle a limited number of items at once, typically around seven plus or minus two, by organizing the information into a smaller number of meaningful groups.
Visual sketchpad
Chunking
Short term potentiation
Phonological loop
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