Psychology 1101: Unit 2 - The Brain and Memory
What are some different forms of mnemonics?
-Acrostic -Acronym -Elaboration -Rhyme -Method of Loci -Link method -Imagery
Why do some people think we forget?
-Ineffective encoding -Decay Theory -Interference Theory -Retrieval Failure -Repressed memories - Freud's idea
Central executive:
-Integrates info from the phonological loop, visuospatial memory, and from long-term memory -Plays an important role in attention, planning, and organizing
Amygdala and negative memories:
-Recall of anxiety provoking experiences -Can be manipulated using experimental drugs -Propondol can obliterate a traumatic memory like PTSD
Ebbinghaus:
-Studied memory and used nonsense syllables (not close to real words) -Learned that we can relearn a list more quickly if it was repeated -Repetition and spaced rehearsal over time is important
Priming:
-Type of implicit memory process -Involves the activation of info that people already have in storage -Helps people remember new info better and faster
Long-term memory:
-Unlimited capacity for storage; may last a lifetime -Magic number = 7+-2 (people can memorize up to 9, but people are the most cozy with 5)
Steps to remembering:
1. Encode 2. Storage 3. Retrieval
Attention:
A selective focus on certain input; enhances encoding
Alzheimer's Disease:
A type of dementia with memory loss; progressive
Misinformation effect:
After exposure to misinformation, people misremember information
What are mnemonic devices?
Any memory aid that's based on encoding each item in a special way
Emma has multiple sclerosis. If you could view her nervous system you would find:
Areas where the myelin sheath has degenerated
The heart, glands, and smooth muscles are controlled by the:
Autonomic nervous system
Primacy effect:
Better recall for items at the beginning of a list
Recency effect:
Better recall for items at the end of a list
Which of the following doesn't describe one of the three main processes involved in memory? A. Maintaining information B. Pulling out information C. Evaluating information D. Putting information in
C
Research by Loftus on eyewitness testimony indicated that what people recall of an accident or crime scene:
Can be influenced by the type of questions they're asked
Research by Loftus on eyewitness testimony indicates that what people recall of an accident or crime scene:
Can be influenced by the types of questions they're asked
The brain structure primarily responsible for the coordination of bodily movements and balance is the:
Cerebellum
The cerebellum and ___ play an important role in implicit memory:
Cerebral cortex
Two ways to improve short-term memory:
Chunking and rehearsal
The storage capacity of short-term memory can be increased by combining items into larger units called:
Chunks
Declarative (explicit) memory:
Conscious, factual hippocampus
The medulla is involved in:
Controlling essential functions such as breathing, regulating circulation, and maintaining muscle tone
The thick band of nerve fibers that connects the two cerebral hemispheres is the:
Corpus callosum
Explicit memory:
Declarative memory; conscious recollection of information like specific facts, events, and it can be verbally communicated
Branches are to trees as _____ are to neurons:
Dendrites
Information is received by a neuron through the ____ and is transmitted towards other neurons through the ____:
Dendrites; axon
___ refers to auditory sensory memory, whereas ___ refers to visual sensory memory:
Echoic/ iconic memory
___ of information is linked with neural activity, especially in the brain's left frontal lobe:
Elaboration
Mom took David and Andrew to the store and asked them to help her remember to buy apples. While David focused his attention in how apples were his favorite fruit, Andrew thought of seeing the red apples in the cart. David was using ___ while Andrew was using ___:
Elaboration; visual imagery
When their mom took them to the store yesterday she asked David and Andrew to help her remember to buy apples. While David focused his attention on how apples were his favorite fruit, Andrew thought of seeing a bag of big red apples in the shopping cart. David was using ____ and Andrew was using ____:
Elaboration; visual imagery
The process by which neural impulses are transmitted through the nervous system is BEST described as:
Electrochemical in nature
Amygdala:
Emotional memories
How do we remember?
Encoding
The first memory process that involves getting information into memory is:
Encoding
The three basic processes in memory are:
Encoding, storage, and retrieval
Three basic processes in memory are:
Encoding, storage, and retrieval
Two types of explicit memory:
Episodic and semantic memory
Which of the following doesn't describe one of the three main processes involved in memory?
Evaluating information in memory
Hippocampus:
Explicit memory; priming
What contributes to the risk of developing Alzheimer's Disease?
Genetics primarily
H.M.:
Had severe epilepsy, so he had his hippocampus removed and a portion of his temporal lobes removed; he was unable to form new memories and had retrieval problems
Cerebellum:
Implicit memories
Sensory memory:
Information from the world that's held in its original form only for an instant, not much longer than the brief time its exposed to the senses; it's rich and detailed, but information is quickly lost
Classical conditioning:
Involves automatic learning of associations between stimuli
Encoding:
Involves forming a memory code
Storage:
Involves maintaining encoded information in the memory over time
Peg-word system:
Involves memorizing a list of objects (pegs) and forming mental images to link the info that you wish to memorize using those pegs
Method of loci:
Involves memorizing a series of places using a vivid image; associate each of locations with something you want to remember
Procedural memory:
Involves memory of skills
Retrieval:
Involves recovering information from memory stores
Long-term memory:
Is an unlimited capacity store that can hold information for lengthy periods of time
What's the information-processing view of memory?
It draws an analogy between a computer and the workings of memory in the human brain; information enters the system, is processed, is encoded, and then stored
Persons having difficulty with language and speech following an accident that resulted in injury to the brain are MOST likely to have sustained damage in the:
Left cerebral hemisphere
The seat of emotion is to be found in the:
Limbic system
Elaboration involves:
Linking a stimulus to other information at the time of encoding
Decay theory:
Memories fade because a neurochemical "memory trace" deteriorates over time
Korsakoff's Syndrome:
Memory loss associated with Vitamin B deficiency
When a person's memory for an event is altered by the later introduction of inaccurate or misleading information, it is referred to as the:
Misinformation effect
Short-term memory has a ___ capacity than sensory memory and a ___ duration:
More limited; longer
Echoic memory:
Name given to auditory sensory memory, which is retained for up to several seconds
The task of passing a message from one neuron to another is actually carried out by:
Neurotransmitters
Locations of neural activity that are connected:
Nodes
Implicit memory:
Non-declarative memory; memory where behavior is affected by prior experience without the experience being consciously recollected; motor skills memory
How do we forget?
Non-retrieval or we never encoded
Implicit region:
Older region of the brain; involves the brain stem and physical/ muscle memory (skills)
Visuospatial working memory:
Stores visual and spatial info, including visual imagery; limited memory. If you put too much info in here, , you can't retrieve this information
The central nervous system consists of:
The brain and spinal cord
Levels of processing:
The idea that encoding occurs on a continuum from shallow to deep, with deep processing producing better memory
Memory construction:
We fill in memory gaps with plausible guesses (what fits)
Serial position effect:
We remember the first and last items within a list
Non-declarative (implicit) memory:
Skills that involve movement
Storage capacity of short-term memory is approximately ___ items:
7
The storage capacity of short-term memory is approximately ____ items:
7
Short-term memory:
7 chunks of information less than 20 seconds; working memory (holds information just long enough to use it - formula, math, etc.)
Review the information processing model on page 1 of the powerpoint:
:-)
Anterograde amnesia:
A memory disorder that affects the retention of new information
Retrograde amnesia:
A memory disorder that involves memory loss for a segment of the past but not for new events
Semantic memory:
A person's knowledge about the world; general knowledge that you learn in school and everyday knowledge about the world (including famous people, common places and things, etc.)
Phonological loop:
Specialized to briefly store speech-based info about the sounds of language; has acoustic codes and rehearsal
The somatic nervous system and the autonomic nervous system comprise the:
Peripheral nervous system
When processing verbal information, if you focus attention on the sounds of words, you are engaging in ____ encoding:
Phonemic
When processing verbal information, if you found on the sounds of words, you're engaging in ___ encoding:
Phonemic
Three components of the working memory:
Phonological loop, visuospatial working memory, and central executive
Proactive interference occurs when:
Previously learned information interferes with the retention of new information
What makes up the serial position effect?
Primacy and recency effects
Three subsystems of implicit memory:
Procedural memory, classical conditional, and priming
Sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory comprise the three components of:
Storage
Multiple choice exams involve testing a student's ___ abilities, whereas essays involve testing ___ abilities:
Recall/ recognition
The main function of dendrites is to:
Receive information
You look up the phone number of the new Pizza Hut and repeat the number silently in your head until you find a pad of paper to write it down. The process of actively repeating the number is called:
Rehearsal
You look up the phone number of the new Pizza Hut and repeat the number silently in your head. The process of actively repeating the number is called:
Rehearsal
What are recovered memories?
Reports of long-lost memories prompted by clinical techniques (usually abuse that took place in early childhood)
The tiny electrical charge that exists when a neuron is not receiving and/or sending information is called:
Resting potential
If forgetting occurs because newly learned information impairs the memory of previously learned information it is referred to as:
Retroactive interference
If forgetting occurs because newly learned information impairs the memory of previously learned information, it's referred to as:
Retroactive interference
Answers to questions about neural mechanics of memory come from experiments on which animal?
Sea slugs
Iconic memory:
The name given to visual sensory memory, which is retained for 1/4 of a second; responsible for our ability to write in the air using a sparkler on the 4th of July (makes light appear to be a line)
Episodic memory:
The retention of info about the where, when, and what of life's events; autobiographical
State-dependent memory:
The tendency to remember something better if your body is in the same state/condition for recall as it was when learned
Engram:
The unit of information to be stored; processes involved in memory encoding, storage, and retrieval
Working memory:
Three-part system that temporarily holds info as people perform cognitive tasks; kind of mental workbench where info is manipulated and assembled
Automatic memory:
Time, location and frequency; recall for number of instances of familiar things; doesn't require conscious thought