|
1 | | The inability to recall information that one realizes one knows is the . |
|
|
2 | | In a specific piece of information must be retrieved, where, in contrast, occurs when people are presented with a stimulus and asked whether they have been exposed to it previously, or are asked to identify it from a list of alternatives. |
|
|
3 | | The suggests that the amount of information processing that occurs when material is initially encountered is central in determining how much of the information is ultimately remembered. |
|
|
4 | | is a phenomenon in which exposure to a word or concept later makes it easier to recall related information. |
|
|
5 | | refers to memory of which people are not consciously aware, but which can affect subsequent performance and behavior. |
|
|
6 | | Flashbulb memories do not contain every detail of an original scene, and the details recalled in flashbulb memories are often . |
|
|
7 | | The more distinctive a stimulus, the more likely we are to recall it later; however, we may not remember the of the information. |
|
|
8 | | Some people have reported life-after-death experiences, such as seeing a bright light, meeting deceased family members, and so on. Are these accurate memories or could people have been influenced by their of "life after death"? |
|
|
9 | | Our recollections of circumstances and episodes from our own lives are called . |
|