Chapter 6 Human Memory
Sensory Memory
Preserves information in its original sensory form for a brief time (1/4 of a second)
Hippocampus
Essential for creating new explicit but not implicit memories; plays central role in laying down new memories.
Encoding
First stage of the memory process; information is transformed or coded (a transduction process) into a form that can be processed further and stored
Prospective Memory
Form of memory that involves remembering to perform a planned action or intention at the appropriate time
Ebbinghaus
Gentleman to first demonstrate how rapidly memories vanish; invented the ______________ Curve of Forgetting
Semantic Memory
Memory information theoretically available to anyone; pertains to general facts about the world.
Implicit Memory
Memory of something one knows or knows how to do.
Method of Ioci
Mneumonic device in which a person visualizes items to be learned with landmarks in some familiar place.
Retroactive Information
New information interferes with old.
Proactive Interference
Old information interferes with new.
Eidetic Imagery
Synonymous with photographic memory
Visual Imagery
The ability to create an eidetic image of past visual experiences; the ability to recall visual images in the form of objects, events, or words
Chunking
The grouping of numbers, letters, or other items into meaningful subsets.
Encoding Specificity Principle
The idea that human memories are more easily retrieved if external conditions (emotional cues) at the time of retrieval are similar to those in existence at the time the memory was stored.
Infantile Amnesia
The inability to remember events from early childhood.
Retrograde Amnesia
The loss of memory surrounding a physically or emotionally traumatic event and can be global (all memories) or limited to memories specific to events that the victim might psychologically want to avoid remembering.
Visuospatial Sketchpad
The place where visual and spatial data are briefly stored and manipulated.
Retrieval
The process of accessing information encoded and stored in memory
Storage
The process of preserving information for possible recollecting in the future.
Central Executive
This directs attention, makes plans, and coordinate activities; determines what information is used and what is ignored.
Episodic Buffer
This forms the bridge between memory and conscious awareness.
Amygdala
This part of the brain is responsible for the formation of implicit and emotional memories.
Memory
This term refers to information the brain receives, stores, and may retrieve for later use.
True or False? Memories are not reliable records of reality
True
Name at three reasons we forget.
• Encoding failure • Misinformation Effect • Proactive/Retroactive Interference • Amnesia
Retrospective Memory
refers to memory of people, words, and events encountered or experienced in the past
Retrieval Cues
A prompt that helps us remember something.
Mneumonics
A way to help translate information so that its easier to remember.
Working Memory
Active processing of memory in short-term memory
Long-Term Memory
An unlimited capacity store that can hold information over lengthy periods of time
Flashbulb Memory
Detailed account of circumstances surrounding emotionally important or shocking event.
Serial Position Effect
Items at the beginning and end of a list are more likely to be remembered.
Short-term Memory
Limited-capacity store that can maintain unrehearsed information for 10-20 seconds.
Alzheimer's Disease
Progressive devastating brain illness that causes cognitive decline, including memory, language, and thinking problems.
Episodic Memory
Record of memorable experiences or 'episodes' including when and where an experience occurred.
Anterograde Amnesia
Refers to an individuals inability to form new memories following a traumatic event.
Echoic Imagery
Sensory memory that is specific to retaining auditory information; lasts about 1-10 seconds.
List the stages, in order, of the Information Processing Model of Memory.
Sensory, short-term, long-term.
List there three levels of memory processing, in order.
Shallow, intermediate, deep.
Priming
Stimulation of memories as a result of retrieval cues in environment
Explicit Memory
Type of memory you're aware of and can express into words, including memories of facts and experiences.
Procedural Memory
Unconscious memory of how to carry out variety of skills and activities.