Chapter 7: Problem 15
The tendency to mold one's interpretation of the past to fit how events actually turned out is called: A. the overconfidence effect. B. selective amnesia. C. retroactive interference. D. the hindsight bias.
Chapter 7: Problem 15
The tendency to mold one's interpretation of the past to fit how events actually turned out is called: A. the overconfidence effect. B. selective amnesia. C. retroactive interference. D. the hindsight bias.
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Get started for freeRoberto is telling Rachel about some juicy gossip when she stops him and informs him that she is the one who passed this gossip on to him about a week ago. In this example, Roberto has: A. been fooled by the misinformation effect. B. made a reality-monitoring error. C. made a source-monitoring error. D. made a prospective memory error.
The tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon: A. is a temporary inability to remember something you know, accompanied by a feeling that it's just out of reach. B. is clearly due to a failure in retrieval. C. reflects a permanent loss of information from LTM. D. is both a and b.
Getting information into memory is called _________; getting information out of memory is called _________. A. storage; retrieval B. encoding; storage C. encoding; retrieval D. storage; encoding
Miles is listening as his mother rattles through a list of 15 or so things that he needs to remember to pack for an upcoming trip. According to George Miller, if Miles doesn't write the items down as he hears them, he will probably remember: A. fewer than 5 items from the list. B. about 10 to 12 items from the list. C. all the items from the list. D. 5 to 9 items from the list.
Your knowledge that birds fly, that the sun rises in the east, and that \(2+2=4\) is contained in your __________ memory. A. structural B. procedural C. implicit D. semantic
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