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AP Psych DMA. Compare/contrast posthypnotic suggestion and posthypnotic amnesia. Who conducted the first experimental studies of associative learning ? Please turn in this week’s DMAs. Today’s Agenda. DMA Quiz buy-back Chapter 9 Roxana, Katie & Melody Chapter 10 review Homework:
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AP Psych DMA • Compare/contrast posthypnotic suggestion and posthypnotic amnesia. • Who conducted the first experimental studies of associative learning? Please turn in this week’s DMAs
Today’s Agenda • DMA • Quiz buy-back • Chapter 9 • Roxana, Katie & Melody • Chapter 10 review Homework: • Final Exam – May 1 & 2 • Review quizzes – refer to calendar • EC Review Pres – various • AP EXAM!!! May 7th • Last day to pay for AP Psych T-shirt is Tuesday, April 24th
Reminders Review Presentations • Thursday, April 26th • Riley & Brendan • Duy & Kyana Last day to pay for an AP Psych T-shirt is Tuesday, April 24th
Countdown… 17 Day until the AP Exam (remember you don’t know what the FRQs will be) 11 Days until the final exam
Chap. 3, 4, 5 & 6 Quiz Buy-Back Due Monday Same process as last time.
Chapter 9 Review Roxana, Katie & Melody
Chapter 10 Review • Find a partner • Select an activity • If you complete the activity, pick another one. • You will be graded on how well you review today…. • Focused, on-task, reviewing all topics, going into depth, completing as many review activities as possible… • Review ALL of the topics during the activity.
Chapter 10 Review Potential activities • Make flashcards • Quiz each other • Reread your notes or textbook • Create a game about the information • Compare/contrast the topics • Summarize each of the topics (verbally or in writing) Topics…. • Framing • Semantics • Availability heuristic • Phonemes • Functional fixedness • Confirmation bias • Algorithm • Language development • Syntax • Morphemes • Belief bias • Mental set • Chomsky • Whorf • Representative heuristic • Babbling stage
Language Morpheme • The smallest unit that carries meaning. • May be a word or a part of a work (prefix) • Example? Phoneme • The smallest distinctive sound unit. • Example?
Language Semantics • the set of rules by which we derive meaning from morphemes, words, and sentences in a given language • study of meaning Syntax • the rules for combining words into grammatically sensible sentences in a given language
100 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 Percentage able to discriminate Hindi Hindi- speaking adults 6-8 months 8-10 months 10-12 months English- speaking adults Infants from English-speaking homes Language We are all born to recognize speech sounds from all the world’s languages
Language Babbling Stage • beginning at 3 to 4 months • infant spontaneously utters various sounds at first unrelated to the household language One-Word Stage • from about age 1 to 2 • child speaks mostly in single words
Language Two-Word Stage • beginning about age 2 • child speaks in mostly two-word statements Telegraphic Speech • child speaks like a telegram • “go car” • using mostly nouns and verbs and omitting “auxiliary” words
Summary of Language Development Month (approximate) Stage Babbles many speech sounds. 4 Babbling reveals households language. 10 12 One-word stage. 24 Two-world, telegraphic speech. 24+ Language develops rapidly into complete sentences.
Language Stages • Babble to your neighbor • Now, speak to him/her like a child in the one-word stage. • Now… give him/her directions to your house (from KR) using only telegraphic speech.
Thinking Framing • the way an issue is posed • how an issue is framed can significantly affect decisions and judgments • Example: What is the best way to market ground beef--as 25% fat or 75% lean? • Imagine that you failed a math test – how would you frame this situation to your parents?
Thinking Functional Fixedness • tendency to think of things only in terms of their usual functions • impediment to problem solving • How could functional fixedness hurt your studying?
Thinking Insight • sudden and often novel realization of the solution to a problem • contrasts with strategy-based solutions Confirmation Bias • tendency to search for information that confirms one’s preconceptions Fixation • inability to see a problem from a new perspective • impediment to problem solving
Thinking Belief Bias • the tendency for one’s preexisting beliefs to distort logical reasoning • sometimes by making invalid conclusions seem valid or valid conclusions seem invalid • How could belief bias affect politics?
Thinking Mental Set • tendency to approach a problem in a particular way • especially a way that has been successful in the past • but may or may not be helpful in solving a new problem
Heuristics Availability Heuristic • estimating the likelihood of events based on their availability in memory • if instances come readily to mind (perhaps because of their vividness), we presume such events are common • Example: airplane crash • How could availability heuristics affect phobias?
Thinking Algorithm • methodical, logical rule or procedure that guarantees solving a particular problem • When have you used algorithms?