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6. How many people hadflashbulb memories that lasted after 26 months for Thatcher's resignation (Conway et al., 1994)?
7. What is everyday memory?
- Memory for what is going on presently
- Memory operations that occur daily
- Memory for past knowledge
- Mental representations of information
8. What don't flashbulb memories differ on?
- Capacity
- Reliance on neural mechanism
- Longevity
- Accuracy
9. What does the neural memory mechanism do?
- Prints the details of the events permanently in memory
- Causes details of the events to be rehearsed naturally in memory
- Causes individuals to think about the event, keeping it in memory
10. Which metaphor is more appropriate in everyday memory?
- Computer metaphor
- Correspondence metaphor
- Store-house metaphor
11. What are flashbulb memories?
- Long-lasting autobiographical memories for dramatic events
- Long-lasting procedural memories for dramartic events
- Long-lasting episodic memories for dramatic events
- Long-lasting semantic memories for dramatic events
12. What is the difference between autobiographical and episodic memory?
- Autobiographical involves automaticity
- Autobiographical involves personal life story
- Episodic involves personal life story
- Episodic involves automaticity
13. What is the store-house metaphor of memory?
- Importance of number of items that can be rehearsed
- Importance of number of items that can be accessed at retrieval
- Importance of a match between one's report of memory and actual event
- Importance of a match between STM and LTM
14. What are naturally occurring memories (Cohen, 2008)?
- STM's
- Memories of memories
- LTM's
- Everyday memories
15. What are older people better at?
- Rehearsal
- Recognition
- Retrieval
- Recall
16. What is autobiographical memory a combination of?
- Procedural and repetitive priming
- Episodic and procedural
- Episodic and semantic
- Semantic and repetitive priming