Chapter 7: Episodic and Semantic Memory
dissociative fugue
extremely rare; loss of memory of identity
Anterograde amnesia
loss of ability to form new episodic/semantic memories
retrograde amnesia
loss of ability to recalled episodic/semantic memories prior to injury
dissociative amnesia
loss of memory of specific,traumatic event
Implicit Memory
memory beyond awareness
False memory
memory of events never happened
retroactive interference
new information disrupt access to old info(ex., passwords)
Nondeclarative memory
not easy to communicate, e.g., skill, classical conditioning
proactive interference
old information disrupt newly learned info
free recall
open‐ended (essay questions) -hardest
recognition
pick out correct answer from list of options (multiple choice) -hard if not study
cued recall
prompt provided (fill‐in the blank questions) -harder
Declarative memory
term used, include both episodic and semantic memories
Explicit Memory
because both consciously accessible
encoding
new memories
reconsolidation
-consolidate recalled memory as if new information -if memory recalled immediately before incident, may be lost
directed forgetting
-intentional forgetting -in lab, not perfect -may help explain memory suppression
Difference between episodic and semantic memory
-episodic memory grows out of semantic memory -must have semantic knowledge to form episodic memory -semantic memory repeated exposure, learning episodes blurred -episodic and semantic interdependent (mutually dependent): declarative memory not strictly episodic or semantic, but contain both
Semantic Memory
-factual information, no need for knowing where/when learned -can be personal (SS number) or general (first president) -can be acquired in single exposure if interesting/important -repeated exposure strengthen semantic memory
Four basic phenomena when memory fails
-forgetting (passive/directed) -interference (proactive/retroactive) -memory misattribution (source amnesia/cryptoamensia) -false memory
Three basic principles of encoding
-mere exposure does not guarantee memory -memory is better for information that relates to prior knowledge -deeper processing at encoding improves later recognition
cryptoamnesia
-mistakenly thinking thoughts novel/original, but actually remembering info learned elsewhere -can lead to plagiarism
role of cues
-more cues mean better recall -free recall -cued recall -recognition
functional amnesia
-rare -sudden, massive retrograde memory loss
Episodic Memory
-specific events at particular place and time -autobiographical ‐must have personally experienced -acquired in single exposure -repeated exposure weaken episodic memory (e.g., where park car)
transient global amnesia (TGA)
-temporary disruption of memory -typical: sudden onset, last several hours, dissipates over a day or two -limit access to fully consolidated memory -might completely erase unconsolidated memory -memory returns after blood flow to brain resumes
memory misattribution
attribute memory to incorrect source
passive forgetting
most forgetting occur within first few hours/days; if survive, might last indefinitely
source amnesia
remember info, but not source
transfer-appropriate processing effect
retrieval more successful if cues available at recall similar to those available during encoding
interference
two memories overlap in content, strength of either/both reduced
memory consolidation period
window when new memories easily lost;if memory survive after few months, may be permanent