________ information is lost from sensory memory, and ________ information is lost from short-term memory.

unpleasant, pleasant
pleasant, unpleasant
unattended, unrehearsed
unrehearsed, unattended
unattended, unrehearsed  

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Shandra is convinced that her neighbour, Joe, is cruel to his dog. She notices every time Joe shouts at the dog or jerks its lead but she doesnโ€™t seem to notice the times when Joe plays with the dog or gives it treats. This is an example of:
A. misinformation
B. anterograde amnesia
C. proactive interference
D. confirmation bias
After a stroke, 22-year-old Malik can no longer remember his childhood friends or the vacations he took with his family. Malik is suffering from:
A. retrograde amnesia
B. anterograde amnesia
C. functional fixedness
D. dyslexia
In stage models of memory, information moves from:
A. sensory to short-term to long-term memory
B. sensory to long-term to working memory
C. short-term to long-term to explicit memory
D. sensory to eidetic to iconic memory
________ interference works backwards, and ________ interference works forwards.
A. primary, recency
B. recency, primacy
C. proactive, retroactive
D. retroactive, proactive
Classical conditioning effects are an example of:
A. eidetic memory
B. primary memory
C. retroactive interference
D. implicit memory
Our tendency to focus on information that is consistent with our beliefs and to ignore contradictory information is called:
A. contradiction avoidance
B. confirmation bias
C. counterfactual thinking
D. functional fixedness
________ memory is to hearing as ________ memory is to seeing.
A. echoic, eidetic
B. eidetic, echoic,
C. working, short-term
D. short-term, working

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