A schema is a mental structure that represents some aspect of the world. People use schemata to organize current knowledge and provide a framework for future understanding. Examples of schemata include rubrics, stereotypes, social roles, scripts, worldviews, and archetypes.
Individuals' existing schemata and stereotypes influence not only how they interpret new information but also how they recall the information over time.
Schemas influence how memories are encoded, stored, and retrieved, potentially leading to distortions in eyewitness testimony. When people reconstruct memories to fit existing schemas, details may be altered or omitted, resulting in inaccuracies in recall. This can be compounded by external factors such as leading questions or post-event information that further distort the original memory.
schemas allow us to organize information so that we can respond appropriately in social situations.
Schemas and Tables
Schemas
Each database will have documentation and the maximum number of schemas will be listed in the documentation--specific to that software product.
In some cases, the patient may have certain fundamental core beliefs, called schemas, which are flawed and require modification.
The cast of An Existential Rupturing of Hedonistic Schemas - 2011 includes: Miles Kelley
A database schema is an actual plan for a database system. Sub-schemas are separate divisions that are used to achieve the plan for the database system.
External schemas allows data access to be customized (and authorized) at the level of individual users or groups of users. Conceptual (logical) schemas describes all the data that is actually stored in the database. While there are several views for a given database, there is exactly one conceptual schema to all users. Internal (physical) schemas summarize how the relations described in the conceptual schema are actually stored on disk (or other physical media). External schemas provide logical data independence, while conceptual schemas offer physical data independence.
it's a collection of information on a subject.
A considerable portion of infants' knowledge of the world is built upon their developing perceptual skills. Essential to this cognitive construction of mental schemas are several key cognitive abilities.
Accommodation
people's conceptual frameworks for understanding their experiences