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Psychology paper 2
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Cards (11)
The more
severe
the verb (smashed/collided/bumped/hit/contacted), the
higher
the speed estimate
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Tulving et al (1994) research
Cognitive neuroscience research into Long Term Memory
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Participants performed memory tasks
1. Brain scanned using
PET
scanner
2. Left
prefrontal
cortex involved in
semantic
memories
3. Right prefrontal cortex involved in recalling
episodic
memories
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Applied cognitive psychology
Wide range of real life
practical
and
theoretical
contexts
CBT use for mental health issues such as
depression
and
OCD
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Interactionist
theory
'Soft determinism'
- cognitive systems operate within limits of what we know, we have
free choice
in how we think and behave
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Research
Loftus and
Palmer Cognitive
approach
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The participants in the first experiment were
45
students of the University of
Washington
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Experiment procedure
1. Shown
seven
film-clips of
traffic
accidents
2. Asked a critical question about the
speed
of the vehicles involved in the
collision
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Experiment conditions
Five
conditions (each with
nine
participants)
Independent
variable manipulated by means of the
wording
of the questions
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Question wording
'How
fast
were the
cars
going when they smashed/collided/bumped/hit/contacted each other?'
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The results found that the more
severe
the verb the higher the
speed
estimate
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