Deck 2: Memory and the Brain

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Question
The oxygen in the blood is most precisely carried by which of the following?
(A)Neurotransmitters
(B)Monocytes
(C)Radioactive reagents
(D)Electrical impulses
(E)Hemoglobin
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Question
The more severe the accident leading to TBI, the:
(A)Longer the expected period of unconsciousness
(B)Poorer the chance of a good recovery
(C)Greater the memory disturbance
(D)Worse the prognosis
(E)All of these
Question
The first functional neuroimaging method developed that relies on the assumption that brain activity can be measured indirectly through its metabolism is:
(A)fMRI
(B)PET
(C)MEG
(D)CT
(E)EEG
Question
Event-related potentials typically can be extracted by doing which of the following?
(A)Taking a blood sample
(B)Looking at the power of different frequency bands during a task
(C)Averaging over many repetitions of the same cognitive activity
(D)Brain surgery to remove the ERPs
(E)Injecting a tracer
Question
LTP and LTD are two potential mechanisms of:
(A)Neuroimaging
(B)Learning
(C)Genotyping
(D)Binocular rivalry
(E)Standardized testing of intelligence
Question
After acquiring a statistical representation of brain activity when a person is looking at a car, a researcher might try to detect whether a participant is thinking of a car, through the use of a(n):
(A)Pattern classifier
(B)Cochlear implant
(C)Multi-volume posterior assumption
(D)Artifact rejection procedure
(E)Vocoder
Question
The process of carrying out a large set of experiments focused on addressing the same theoretical question, but using different methods and participant groups is called:
(A)Exact replication
(B)Divergence
(C)Converging operations
(D)Bootstrapping
(E)Default mode
Question
Finding an appropriate cognitive baseline condition is particularly crucial in which of the following basic fMRI procedure?
(A)Inception
(B)Tractography
(C)Granger causality
(D)Effective connectivity
(E)Subtraction method
Question
Relative to ERP, MEG is:
(A)More expensive
(B)Less subject to distortion from the skull
(C)Able to potentially offer better spatial localization
(D)More sensitive to activity in the sulci
(E)All of these
Question
An attempt to use fMRI as a lie detector in an actual court case resulted in the following conclusion:
(A)It should not be accepted as evidence in court pending further study
(B)The method had not gained widespread acceptance among scientists
(C)The method's real-world accuracy had yet to be assessed
(D)The method's real-world validity had yet to be assessed
(E)All of these
Question
EEG involves recording which of the following across the scalp?
(A)Neurotransmitter release
(B)Fluctuating voltages
(C)Changes in the oxygenation of blood
(D)Structural bone density
(E)Tiny magnetic fields generated by groups of neurons and picked up by SQUIDs
Question
Using implanted electrodes to invasively record directly from the brain of patients is limited to brain regions directly relevant to:
(A)The medial temporal lobe
(B)Memory regions
(C)Clinical treatment
(D)Theoretical interest of basic research
(E)The surface of the brain
Question
Currently, the best temporal resolution of ERP and MEG is on the order of:
(A)Milliseconds
(B)Seconds
(C)Minutes
(D)Picoseconds
(E)Hours
Question
MRI can distinguish various structures in the brain (e.g. white matter from gray matter)by doing which of the following?
(A)Staining the cells differently
(B)Implanting electrodes at different depths
(C)Directing ionizing radiation at the brain from different angles
(D)Varying the frequency of the radio pulse
(E)Observing infrared reflectance
Question
MVPA stands for which of the following?
(A)Multi-view photon array
(B)Multi-voxel pattern analysis
(C)Myelin vector product arrangement
(D)Minute vacillation prototype analysis
(E)Measured vasopressin accumulation
Question
The systematic decrease in a learned response after repeated presentations of a stimulus is most accurately termed:
(A)Reward
(B)Sensitization
(C)Extinction
(D)Habituation
(E)Punishment
Question
Delivering TMS via which procedure has been known to lead to a temporary "lesion" lasting many minutes?
(A)Repetitive
(B)Single pulse
(C)Radioactive tracing
(D)Deep-brain stimulation
(E)Intravenous drugs
Question
An especially powerful way of ruling out the possibility that a deficit in one task represents a simple disparity in difficulty with another task, for which performance is preserved, is the:
(A)Occam's razor
(B)Case study
(C)Single dissociation
(D)Double dissociation
(E)Counterfactual
Question
Which approach is particularly well suited to providing a clinical overview of a condition, but may yield ambiguous answers to theoretical questions about particular processes if the condition is relatively nonspecific?
(A)Randomized clinical trial
(B)Computer modeling
(C)Selective lesioning
(D)Group study
(E)Transcranial-magnetic stimulation
Question
Rotating an X-ray detector around a person's head to form a three-dimensional representation of their brain is an example of:
(A)Intracranial cellular recording
(B)Magnetic resonance imaging
(C)Electrocardiography
(D)Electroencephalography
(E)Computerized tomography
Question
Which two researchers are credited with discovering the structure of DNA?
(A)Baddeley and Hitch
(B)Watson and Crick
(C)Eric Kandel and Donald Hebb
(D)Rescorla and Wagner
(E)Darwin and Sir Francis Galton
Question
Epigenetics refers most accurately to:
(A)The study of gene-environment interaction
(B)The development of genetic hybrid animal models
(C)The historical analysis of the eugenics movement
(D)The development of artificial intelligence
(E)Simple Mendelian inheritance
Question
Down syndrome can be described as sporadic in that:
(A)There's no evidence it runs in families
(B)It reflects chromosomal abnormalities
(C)It typically resolves by the seventh year of age
(D)It tends to arise every other generation in families
(E)It is wholly independent of genetic factors
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Deck 2: Memory and the Brain
1
The oxygen in the blood is most precisely carried by which of the following?
(A)Neurotransmitters
(B)Monocytes
(C)Radioactive reagents
(D)Electrical impulses
(E)Hemoglobin
E
2
The more severe the accident leading to TBI, the:
(A)Longer the expected period of unconsciousness
(B)Poorer the chance of a good recovery
(C)Greater the memory disturbance
(D)Worse the prognosis
(E)All of these
E
3
The first functional neuroimaging method developed that relies on the assumption that brain activity can be measured indirectly through its metabolism is:
(A)fMRI
(B)PET
(C)MEG
(D)CT
(E)EEG
B
4
Event-related potentials typically can be extracted by doing which of the following?
(A)Taking a blood sample
(B)Looking at the power of different frequency bands during a task
(C)Averaging over many repetitions of the same cognitive activity
(D)Brain surgery to remove the ERPs
(E)Injecting a tracer
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
LTP and LTD are two potential mechanisms of:
(A)Neuroimaging
(B)Learning
(C)Genotyping
(D)Binocular rivalry
(E)Standardized testing of intelligence
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
After acquiring a statistical representation of brain activity when a person is looking at a car, a researcher might try to detect whether a participant is thinking of a car, through the use of a(n):
(A)Pattern classifier
(B)Cochlear implant
(C)Multi-volume posterior assumption
(D)Artifact rejection procedure
(E)Vocoder
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The process of carrying out a large set of experiments focused on addressing the same theoretical question, but using different methods and participant groups is called:
(A)Exact replication
(B)Divergence
(C)Converging operations
(D)Bootstrapping
(E)Default mode
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Finding an appropriate cognitive baseline condition is particularly crucial in which of the following basic fMRI procedure?
(A)Inception
(B)Tractography
(C)Granger causality
(D)Effective connectivity
(E)Subtraction method
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Relative to ERP, MEG is:
(A)More expensive
(B)Less subject to distortion from the skull
(C)Able to potentially offer better spatial localization
(D)More sensitive to activity in the sulci
(E)All of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
An attempt to use fMRI as a lie detector in an actual court case resulted in the following conclusion:
(A)It should not be accepted as evidence in court pending further study
(B)The method had not gained widespread acceptance among scientists
(C)The method's real-world accuracy had yet to be assessed
(D)The method's real-world validity had yet to be assessed
(E)All of these
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
EEG involves recording which of the following across the scalp?
(A)Neurotransmitter release
(B)Fluctuating voltages
(C)Changes in the oxygenation of blood
(D)Structural bone density
(E)Tiny magnetic fields generated by groups of neurons and picked up by SQUIDs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
Using implanted electrodes to invasively record directly from the brain of patients is limited to brain regions directly relevant to:
(A)The medial temporal lobe
(B)Memory regions
(C)Clinical treatment
(D)Theoretical interest of basic research
(E)The surface of the brain
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Currently, the best temporal resolution of ERP and MEG is on the order of:
(A)Milliseconds
(B)Seconds
(C)Minutes
(D)Picoseconds
(E)Hours
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
MRI can distinguish various structures in the brain (e.g. white matter from gray matter)by doing which of the following?
(A)Staining the cells differently
(B)Implanting electrodes at different depths
(C)Directing ionizing radiation at the brain from different angles
(D)Varying the frequency of the radio pulse
(E)Observing infrared reflectance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
MVPA stands for which of the following?
(A)Multi-view photon array
(B)Multi-voxel pattern analysis
(C)Myelin vector product arrangement
(D)Minute vacillation prototype analysis
(E)Measured vasopressin accumulation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The systematic decrease in a learned response after repeated presentations of a stimulus is most accurately termed:
(A)Reward
(B)Sensitization
(C)Extinction
(D)Habituation
(E)Punishment
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Delivering TMS via which procedure has been known to lead to a temporary "lesion" lasting many minutes?
(A)Repetitive
(B)Single pulse
(C)Radioactive tracing
(D)Deep-brain stimulation
(E)Intravenous drugs
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
An especially powerful way of ruling out the possibility that a deficit in one task represents a simple disparity in difficulty with another task, for which performance is preserved, is the:
(A)Occam's razor
(B)Case study
(C)Single dissociation
(D)Double dissociation
(E)Counterfactual
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Which approach is particularly well suited to providing a clinical overview of a condition, but may yield ambiguous answers to theoretical questions about particular processes if the condition is relatively nonspecific?
(A)Randomized clinical trial
(B)Computer modeling
(C)Selective lesioning
(D)Group study
(E)Transcranial-magnetic stimulation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Rotating an X-ray detector around a person's head to form a three-dimensional representation of their brain is an example of:
(A)Intracranial cellular recording
(B)Magnetic resonance imaging
(C)Electrocardiography
(D)Electroencephalography
(E)Computerized tomography
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Which two researchers are credited with discovering the structure of DNA?
(A)Baddeley and Hitch
(B)Watson and Crick
(C)Eric Kandel and Donald Hebb
(D)Rescorla and Wagner
(E)Darwin and Sir Francis Galton
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Epigenetics refers most accurately to:
(A)The study of gene-environment interaction
(B)The development of genetic hybrid animal models
(C)The historical analysis of the eugenics movement
(D)The development of artificial intelligence
(E)Simple Mendelian inheritance
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Down syndrome can be described as sporadic in that:
(A)There's no evidence it runs in families
(B)It reflects chromosomal abnormalities
(C)It typically resolves by the seventh year of age
(D)It tends to arise every other generation in families
(E)It is wholly independent of genetic factors
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 23 flashcards in this deck.