Psychology Chapter 6

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Prospective Memories

Habitual tasks are easier to remember than occasional tasks

Explicit Memories

2 kinds of this kind of memory; 1: Episodic Memories 2: Semantic Memories

Loftus

Female Psychologist that demonstrated how easy it was to implant false memories

Loftus

Female Psychologist that noted memories are distorted by biases and needs

Nonsense Syllables

Syllables that are meaningless sets of two consonants with a vowel in between

Time Based Tasks

Tasks to be performed at a certain time, or after a certain time

Explicit

Term for things that are clear, clearly stated, or explained

Interference Theory

Theory that we may forget stored material because other learning interferes with it`

True

True or False? A woman who couldn't remember who she was automatically dialed her mother's numer when the police gave her a telephone

False

True or False? All of our experiences are permanently imprinted on the brain, so the proper stimulus can cause us to remember them exactly

True

True or False? If you c an see, you have a photographic memory

True

True or False? It may be easier for you to recall the name of your first grade teacher than the name of someone you just met at a party?

Serial Position Effect

The ability to recall the first and last letters in a sequene

Eidetic Imagery

The ability to retain exact mental representations of visual stimuli over long periods of time. Legitimately having a "Photographic Memory" Very rare.

Retrieval

This can be made easier if the two syllables can e meaningfully linked, or encoded semantically

Serial Position Effect

This effect may occur because w pay more attention to the first and last stimuli in a series

Event Based Tasks

Triggered by events such as remembering to take your medicine or to brush your teeth after eating

Priming

A process that makes I t possible for people to carry out mental talks with less neural activity

Chunking

A stimulus or group of stimuli perceived as discrete pieces of information

Daniel Schacter

Illustrated implicit memory with the story of the woman with amnesia wandering the streets. She couldn't remember any information, but could dial her mothers phone number.

State Dependent Memory

In reference to this memory, you're more likely to retrieve information when you're in a similar biological state as you were when the information was encoded

Implicit Memories

Involve procedures and skills, cognitive and physical, and are also referred to as procedural or skill memories.

Maintenance Rehearsal

Mentally repeating something or saying it to yourself in attempts to encode it

Prospective Memory

Moods can effect this memory

Saccadic Eye Movements

Movements that occur up to four times a second

Proactive Interference

Older learning interferes with the ability to learn new information

Recognize

One aspect of forgetting is failing to _________ something we have already experienced

Thalmus

Part of the brain in relation to the Hippocampus that's involved in the formation of verbal memories

Whole Report Procedure

Procedure where people were asked to report every letter they saw in an array

Modified Partial Report Procedure

Procedure where people were asked to report the contents of one of three rows of letters

Organization

Allows us to make predictions about specific instances and store information efficiently

Short Term Memory

Also known a the Working Memory

Explicit Memory

Also known as declarative memory

Implicit Memory

Also referred to as declarative memory

Retrospective and Prospective Memories

An age related decline in older adults take place in these two kinds of memories

Engram

An assumed electrical circuit in the brain that corresponds to a memory trace

Recall

Another memory task that allows you to remember what you previously learned

Hierarchical Structure

Arrangement of items into groups or classes according to common or distinct features

Elaborate Rehearsal

Attempts to encode information y relating it to something you already know

Freud

Believed we're motives to forget painful memories and unacceptable ideas because they produce anxiety, guilt and shame. Repression.

Prospective Memory

Distractions can affect this kind of memory

Long Term Potentiation

Enhanced efficiency in synaptic transmission that follows rife rapid stimulation (LTP)

Retrospective Memories

Episodic, semantic, and implicit memories involve remember things that were learned. Examples of this kind of memory

Retroactive Interference

Example of this interference: 1. A medical student may memorize the names of the bones in the leg through repetition. But later, trying to learn the bones in the arm makes it harder to remember the bones in the leg

Episodic Memory

Example of this kind of memory: Jeff remembering he personally dropped his phone in Boston on a rainy day.

Context Dependent Memory

Example of this memory: 1. Perfume smell reminding you of a person 2. Cooking smells reminding you of baking with your grandma

Interference Theory

Example of this theory: 1. Learning Spanish makes it harder to remember French

Episodic Memories

Examples of these memories: 1. What you ate for breakfast 2. What your professor said during class

Elaborating

Extending the semantic meaning of the things you're trying to rememer

Tip Of The Tongue Phenomenon

Known as the feeling of knowing experience. You "know" the word but you just can't think of it or say it.

Storage

Means maintains information over time

Method Of Savings

Measure of retention where the difference tweet the number of rep originally required to learn a list and the number of reps required to re learn the list after a certain amount of t I me has elapsed is calculated (MOS)

Flashbulb Memories

Memories created by surprising, important, and emotional stirring events

Episodic Memories

Memories of things that happen or take place in our presence

Autobiographical Memory

Memory also referred to as Episodic Memory (Hint: Auto means self)

Explicit Memory

Memory for specific information

Miller

Psychologist that found the average person is comfortable with remembering about seven things at a time

Sperling

Psychologist that showed there's a difference between what people can see and what they report

Prospective Memory

Refers to remembering things to do in the FUTURE

Short Term Memory

Regarding this kind of memory, if the information isn't encoded, it significantly fades after 10-12 seconds

Semantic Code

Represents stimuli in terms of meaning

Savings

The difference eaten the number of reps originally required to learn a list and the number of reps required to relearn the list after a certain amount of time has elapsed. (S)

Recognition

The easiest type of memory task

Encode

The first stage in information processing.

Implicit Memory

The memory of how to perform a task or doing an act itself

Echoes

The memory traces of auditory stimuli can lasts for several seconds, much longer than visual stimuli.

Icons

The mental representations of visual stimuli

Memory

The process by which information is encoded, stored, and retrieved

Retrospective Memory

The recalling of information that's even previously learned

Relearning

The third method of measuring retention

Long Term Memory

The third stage of information processing.

Retrieval

The third step in the memory process

Implicit Memories

These memories are suggested, or implied, but not plainly stated or verbally expressed

Implicit Memories

These memories can endure even when they haven't been used for years

Declarative

These memories state or reveal specific information. Also known as Explicit Memories

Acoustic Code

Trying to remember something by representing the stimuli as a sequence of sounds

Nonsense Syllables

Useful in the measurement of forgetting

Chunks

Usually kept on short term memory

Memory Trace

Visual Impression flashed on that lasts for only fractions of sections

Schema

Way of mentally representing the world

Episodic Memory

We tend to use the phrase, "I remember" when referring to this kind of memory

Freud

Well known Psychologist that believed nearly all of our perceptions and ideas are stored permanently

Organized

When items are correctly ________ in long- term memory, you're more likely to recall accurate information about them

Context Dependent Memory

Memory where information that's better retrieved in the context in which it was encoded and stored, or learned

Hippocampus

Part of the brain that's involved in the formation of memories

Richard Atkinson and Richard Shiffrin

Proposed the 3 stages of memory

Retrograde Amnesia

The source of trauma prevents remembering events BEFORE the audience

Sensory Memory

This memory is first encountered by a stimulus

Retrieval

This requires knowledge of proper retrieval cues

Encoding

This stage of information processing includes visual, acoustic, and semantic codes.

Paired Associates

Lists of pairs of nonsense syllables used to measure recall

Retrieval

Locating information and returning it to consciousness

Anterograde Amnesia

Memory lapses AFTER a traumatic event

Episodic Memory

Memory of an event in one's life

Echoes

Memory that has contains mental representations of sounds, or auditory stimuli

Iconic Memory

Memory that holds icons for up to a full second

Semantic Memory

Memory that's also referred to as general knowledge. It concerns meanings. (Examples:) You can "know" that the United States has 50 states without visiting them and personally adding them up.

State Dependent Memory

Memory where an extension of context dependent memory. Where we retrieve information better when we're in a biological or emotional state similar to the one we were in when we encoded and stored the information

Dissociative Amnesia

Psychoanalysts believe repression is at the heart of disorders such as this one.

James

Psychologist intrigued by the fact that some memories are unreliable.

Encoding

The process when we transform sensory input a do ur own ideas into psychological formats that can represented mentally

Storage

The second stage in processing informatoin

Echoic Memory

The sensory register that holds echoes, sounds; a kind of memory

Iconic Memory

The sensory register that holds icons

False

True or False? Learning must be meaningful if we're to remember it

Visual Code

Trying to remember something by mentally making it into a picture

Displace

When the appearance of new information takes place of old information

Retrieval

When trying to remember large amounts of information, this step in the memory process can be difficult

Saccadic Eye Movements

When we look at a visual stimulus, our impressions consist of a series of eye fixatoins

Infantile Amnesia

Where most people can't recall anything before age five

Retroactive Interference

Where new learning interferes with the retrieval of old learning

Proactive Interference

Examples of this interference: 1. High School Spanish may pop in your head when you're trying to retrieve college French or Italian words

Prospective Memories

Examples of this memory: 1. Remembering to pay your bills 2. Remembering to withdraw some cash

Implicit Memories

Examples of this memory: 1. Riding a bike 2. Accessing your contacts list 3. Sending a text message

Short Term Memories

Examples of this memory: 1. When you're given a new phone number and you write it down 2. When you're told then name of a person at a party and use the name immediately in addressing the person


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