What is the disease/ Rodger- McDermott (DMR) effect and how is memory involved? Remembering lists of related words often leads to a false memory of another word that is closely ass... What is the disease/ Rodger- McDermott (DMR) effect and how is memory involved? Remembering lists of related words often leads to a false memory of another word that is closely associated to it. The memory of the details is lost over time but the association are still there. Ben remembered info with no cues what type of retrieval is used? Recall What type of intelligence looks at the average commonalities among intellectual abilities? General intelligence ___conditioning is the process by which we learn to associate unrelated stimuli with involuntary behavior? Classical Kayla went over to her friend’s house after being told she could not go. As a result her mom spanks her what type of operant conditioning is this? Positive punishment If I reward my dog by letting him outside only after they ring bell twice what type of partial reinforcement schedule am I using? Fixed ratio What is an example of a secondary reinforcer? (Money, grades, applause, praise) anything that has no inherent value.
Understand the Problem
The question is about different aspects of memory, including types of amnesia, the process of memory construction and reconstruction, forgetting mechanisms, and techniques for enhancing memory. It also includes exam-style questions on the subject of psychology related to learning and memory.
Answer
The disease in question is likely the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) effect involving false memories.
The disease in question is likely the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) effect, which involves creating false memories when remembering lists of related words. Memory of details fades, but associations remain. Ben's retrieval type is recall. General intelligence looks at common abilities. Classical conditioning links stimuli to behavior. Kayla's case is positive punishment. Letting the dog outside after ringing a bell twice is a fixed ratio reinforcement. Money is an example of a secondary reinforcer.
Answer for screen readers
The disease in question is likely the Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) effect, which involves creating false memories when remembering lists of related words. Memory of details fades, but associations remain. Ben's retrieval type is recall. General intelligence looks at common abilities. Classical conditioning links stimuli to behavior. Kayla's case is positive punishment. Letting the dog outside after ringing a bell twice is a fixed ratio reinforcement. Money is an example of a secondary reinforcer.
More Information
The DRM paradigm is a key method in cognitive psychology for studying false memories. It demonstrates how people can falsely recall words that are related but not actually presented.
Tips
A common mistake is confusing the DRM effect with actual memory recall issues; it specifically refers to false memories created through associative processes.
Sources
- Deese–Roediger–McDermott paradigm - Wikipedia - en.wikipedia.org
- The Deese-Roediger-McDermott (DRM) Task: A Simple Cognitive ... - ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
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