Introduction to Psychology Gateways to Mind and Behavior 13e chapter 7
Hippocampus
A brain structure associated with emotion and the transfer of information from short-term memory to long-term memory.
Echoic memory
A brief continuation of sensory activity in the auditory system after a sound in heard.
Supression
A conscious effort to put something out of mind or to keep it form awareness.
Curve of forgetting
A graph that shows the amount of memorized information remembered after varying lengths of time.
Implicit memory
A memory that a person does not know exists; a memory that is retrieved unconsciously.
Explicit memory
A memory that a person is aware of having; a memory that is consciously retried.
False memory
A memory that can seem accurate but is not.
Iconic memory
A mental image or visual representation.
Network model (of memory)
A model of memory that views it as an organized system of linked information.
Massed practice
A practice schedule in which studying continues for long periods, without interruption.
Spaced practice
A practice schedule that alternates study periods with brief rests.
Semantic memory
A sub-part of declarative memory that records impersonal knowledge about the world.
Episodic memory
A sub-part of declarative memory that records personal experiences that are linked with specific times and places.
Recognition
An ability to correctly identify previously learned information.
Electroconvulsive shock (ECS)
An electric current passed directly through the brain, producing a convulsion.
Working memory
Another name for short-term memory, especially as it is used for thinking and problem solving.
Mnemonic
Any kind of memory system or aid.
Keyword method
As an aid to memory, using a familiar word or image to link two items.
Long-term potentiation
Brain mechanism used to form lasting memories by strengthening the connection between neurons that become more active at the same time.
Encoding
Converting information into a form in which it will be retained in memory.
Priming
Facilitating the retrieval of an implicit memory by using cues to activate hidden memories.
Encoding failure
Failure to store sufficient information to form a useful memory.
Storage
Holding information in memory for later use.
Information chunks
Information bits grouped into larger units.
Relearning
Learning again something that was previously learned. Used to measure memory prior to learning.
Rote rehearsal (rote learning)
Learning by simple repetition.
Procedural memory
Long-term memories of conditioned responses and learned skills.
Retrograde amnesia
Loss of memory for events that preceded a head injury or other amnesia-causing event.
Anterograde amnesia
Loss of the ability to form or retrieve memories for events that occur after and injury or trauma.
Elaborative processing
Making memories more meaningful through processing that encodes links between new information and existing memories and knowledge, either at the time of the original encoding or on subsequent retrievals.
Positive transfer
Mastery of one task aids learning or performing another.
Negative transfer
Mastery of one task conflicts with learning or performing another.
Information bits
Meaningful units of information, such as numbers, letters, words, or phrases.
Availability (in memory)
Memories currently stored in memory are available.
Accessibility (in memory)
Memories currently stored in memory which can be retrieved when necessary are both available and accessible.
Flashbulb memory
Memory created at times of high emotion that seems especially vivid.
State-dependent learning
Memory influenced by one's bodily state at the time of learning and at the time of retrieval. Improved memory occurs when the bodily states match.
Mental images
Mental pictures or visual depictions used in memory and thinking.
Source confusion (in memory)
Occurs when the origins of a memory are misremembered.
Memory traces
Physical changes in nerve cells or brain activity that take place when memories are stored.
Reintegration
Process by which memories are reconstructed or expanded by starting with one memory then following chains of association to other, related memories.
Consolidation
Process by which relatively permanent memories are formed in the brain.
Retrieval
Recovering information from storage in memory.
Recording
Reorganizing or modifying information to assist storage in memory.
Overlearn
To continue to study beyond bare mastery.
Recall
To supply or reproduce memorized information with minimum of external cues.
Repression
Unconsciously pushing unwanted memories out of awareness.
Cognitive interview
Use of various cues and strategies to improve the memory of eyewitnesses.
Maintenance rehearsal
Silently repeating or mentally reviewing information to hold it in short-term memory.
Retrieval cue
Stimulus associated with a memory. Retrieval cues usually enhance memory.
Declarative memory
That part of long-term memory containing specific factual information.
Feeling of knowing
The ability to predict beforehand whether one will be able to remember something.
Eidetic imagery
The ability to retain a "projected" mental image long enough to use it as a source of information.
Memory decay
The fading or weakening of memories assumed to occur when memory traces become weaker.
Tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) state
The feeling that a memory is available but not quite retrievable.
Deja vu
The feeling that you have already experienced a situation that you are actually experiencing for the first time.
Sensory memory
The first, normally, unconscious, stage of memory, which holds an exact record of incoming information for a few seconds or less.
Long-term memory (LTM)
The memory system used for relatively permanent storage of meaningful information.
Short-term memory (STM)
The memory system used to hold small amounts of information in our conscious awareness for about a dozen seconds.
Memory
The mental system for receiving, encoding, storing, organizing, altering, and retrieving information.
Interferance
The tendency for new memories to impair retrieval of older memories, and the reverse.
Retroactive interferance
The tendency for new memories to interfere with the retrieval of old memories.
Proactive interference
The tendency for old memories to interfere with the retrieval of newer memories.
Serial position effect
The tendency to make the most errors in remembering the middle items of an ordered list.
Disuse
Theory that memory traces weaken when memories are not periodically used or retrieved.