A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W

F

facial micro-expressions

expressions of emotion as a sequence of involuntary, fast facial action

defined by Anastassia Blechko

False allegations

Accusations of crimes that are not anchored in real events.

defined by Mikaela Magnusson

false belief

belief for the occurrence of events that actually do not happen

defined by Jianqin Wang

false confession

when a person confesses to a crime that they did not actually commit; often occurs as a result of inappropriate interrogation and/or mental impairment

defined by Anna Sagana

False confessions

When an innocent suspect admits to a crime he/she did not commit. 

defined by Katherine Hoogesteyn

false memories

remembering details or whole events that were not experienced

defined by Nathalie Brackmann

false memory

remembering events that do not happen

defined by Jianqin Wang

false memory implantation

a method to implant false memories into participants; in this method participants are persuaded by photoshopped photos that they have experienced an event and then form false memories for the event

defined by Jianqin Wang

familiarity-liking effect

the tendency to like what is familiar 

defined by Jenny C. Su

fatuous love

is passion plus commitment; you’re thinking about the other person all the time, your pulse races when you think about them, and you like to giggle together about the word “forever,” even if you don’t have a deep intimate understanding of each other (well, yet)

defined by Alex Gunz

feature

Building block of perceptual impressions or planned actions (like form, color, orientation, movement direction, location, speed, size, etc.).

defined by Carina Giesen, Markus Janczyk, David Dignath, Roland Pfister, Birte Moeller

feminist-disability theory

a framework to analyze and critique social systems and material practices that stigmatize certain kinds of bodily variations (i.e., people with disabilities); the key motives are forging positive identities and promoting the inclusion of women with disabilities in mainstream society

defined by Angela Celebre

field

a term introduced by Csikszentmihalyi (1999) to describe a social group responsible for judging individual outcomes according to their creativity; the field is a relevant social system for the creating individual and it represents a part of society

defined by Cara Kahl

field study

a research project conducted in everyday, real-world settings

defined by Anna Sagana

Fight-flight-freeze response

A physiological reaction that occurs in response to an acute stressful situation to help people cope with danger; also called “the acute stress response”

defined by Carey Marr

filial imprinting

is imprinting (see below) by offspring

defined by Stephen Bertman

Flashback

Sudden, disturbing, and often repeated vivid memories of an event in the past; associated with PTSD, those who experience flashbacks feel like the traumatic event is happening all over again

defined by Carey Marr

fluency

subjective experience of ease with which people process information

defined by Namkje Koudenburg

fMRI

A scientific method used to indirectly study brain activity through measuring oxygen supply with a strong magnetic field.

defined by Pascal Vrtička

fNIRS

A scientific method used to indirectly study brain activity through measuring oxygen supply with infrared light.

defined by Pascal Vrtička

foils

lineup members of known likely to be innocent (also named distractors or fillers)

defined by Melanie Sauerland

folk biology

the cognitive study of how people classify and reason about the organic world; of particular interest is the human tendency to classify animals and plants into specific species-based groups

defined by Arno van Voorst

Forensic child interview

When children are interviewed by police as part of a criminal investigation.

defined by Mikaela Magnusson

forensic evidence

Physical evidence such as ballistics, blood test, and DNA test etc. utilized in legal cases

defined by Bruna Calado

forgotten details

information in eyewitness accounts that was reported in an initial recall-attempt, but is not reported later

defined by Nina Tupper

framing

Different forms of presenting the same information that trigger different psychological processes. Examples: A glass is half full vs. half empty; 100 out of 300 people died vs. 200 out of 300 people were saved.

defined by Mario Herberz

Free recall

A memory test in which people are asked to provide information any and all information they can remember

defined by Carey Marr

free-riders

selfish individuals within a group whom consume a public resource without contributing toward its cost (i.e., individuals who obtain benefits or rewards without making an appropriate effort or sacrifice)

defined by Ashley Waggoner Denton

Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging

a neuroimaging technique that indirectly measures changes in neuronal activity through indexing the utilization of oxygen in the blood. This technique has proven incredibly useful for localizing brain function

defined by Joe Moran

Functional near-infrared spectroscopy

A scientific method used to indirectly study brain activity through measuring oxygen supply with infrared light.

defined by Pascal Vrtička

fundamental attribution error

the tendency for people to over-emphasize dispositional, or personality-based, explanations for behaviors observed in others while under-emphasizing situational explanations

defined by Arno van Voorst

Fundamental Attribution Error

people's tendency to place an undue emphasis on internal characteristics to explain someone else's behavior in a given situation, rather than considering external factors

defined by Joe Moran

Fuzzy-trace Theory (FTT)

according to this theory, information is stored into two traces: a) the verbatim trace captures specific details, and b) the gist trace captures underlying meanings

defined by Nathalie Brackmann