Memory
Recall
Ability to bring back information and integrate it ie: Short answer/essay questions
Recognition
Ability to pick the correct answer from a list of choices ie: Multiple choice
Schema
An organized and systematic approach to answering questions or solving problems
Elaboration
Attaching the maximum number of details to an item
Acoustic memory
Brief sound memory
Iconic Memory
Brief visual memory
Explain how chunking, principle learning, mnemonic devices, and elaboration help us learn material.
By learning things in one of these ways we are able to better remember them. Chunking allows us to group things, principle learning focuses on the main idea, mnemonic devices are unusual associations, and elaboration is attaching a maximum # of details to an item.
Sensory Memory
Directly receives info from the enviornment
Emotional Involvement
Emotional factor
Principle learning
Focus on basic ideas behind whats being learned
State-dependent learning
Learning that becomes associated with the conditions under which it occurred so that it is best remembered under the same conditions
Pretend you have amnesia. Which memories would you probably regain first, old memories or new memories? Explain the reasoning for your answer.
Old memories because it amnesia affects your hippocampus which is where the encoding, storage, and retrieving memories happens.
Eidetic Memory
Photographic memory
Explain the difference between a positive and negative transfer.
Positive is learning results from similarities between two task. Negative is learning results from differences between two tasks.
Information Processing
Process of encoding, storing, retrieving materials
Chunking
Putting items into clusters so they can be learned in groups
Short term memory
Retains information for a few seconds to minutes
Long term memory
Retains information for hours, days, weeks, ect.
Describe different characteristics of STM, LTM and SMS
STM: retains info for a few seconds to minutes. LTM: retains info for hours, days, weeks, ect. SMS: directly receives info from the enviornment.
Jack is about to study for this psychology test. Discuss how stimulants and depressants could increase or decrease Jack's retention.
Stimulants: Caffeine can increase memory. Too much can decrease. Depressants: Always decrease memory, blocks firing of neurotransmitters.
Interference Theory
The belief that we forget new and old material conflict with one another
Amnesia
The blocking of older memories and the loss of new ones
Overlearning
The process of learning something beyond one perfect recitation so that the forgetting curve will have no effect
Mnemonic Device
Unusual associations