Chapter 7 Part 1
Chapter 7 Part 1
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KEY QUESTION: What is Memory?
CORE CONCEPT: Human memory is an information–processing system that works constructively to
encode, stores, and retrieves information
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Memory:
Cognitive psychology referring to the process used in acquiring, storing, retaining, and retrieving
information.
1. Encoding: Information stored in our memory that could be used later on
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KEY QUESTION: How do we form memories?
CORE CONCEPT: Each of the three stages of memory encodes and stores memories in different ways.
But they also work together to transform sensory experience into a lasting record that has a pattern or
meaning
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Visual Stimulation = Iconic Memory
Auditory Stimulation = Echoic Memory
Tactile (touch) Stimulation = Tactile Sensory Memory
Olfactory Stimulation = Olfactory Sensory Memory
Gustatory Stimuli = Gustatory Sensory Memory
Procedural Memory: Type of long-term memory of how to perform different actions and skills/ Memory
of
how to do certain things
Declarative Memory: Type of long-term memory that refers to memories which can be consciously
recalled
such as facts and knowledge (Explain/state)
Episodic Memory (Autobiographical memory) : Type of long-term memory that involves the
recollection of specific events, situations, and experiences (remembering one
specific moment in time; Ex. favorite vacation, first boyfriend’s name)
Semantic Memory: Type of long-term memory that refers to the memory of meanings,
understandings,
and other concept-based knowledge (details such as language, facts,
general knowledge; ex. capital cities of five countries, names of the last
three kings)
*Declarative, episodic, and semantic can be combined
Engram or Memory Trace: Engrams are by means which memory traces are stored by biophysical or
biochemical changes in the brain
Anterograde Amnesia: Loss of memory for events after an incident (Inability to form new memories)
Retrograde Amnesia: Loss of memory-access to events that occurred or information that was learned
before an injury or onset of disease (Inability to remember past memories)
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Parts of the Brain Associated with Long Term Memory
Amygdala: strengthens memories that have strong emotional associations….
Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Visual Cortex:
Hippocampus: deterioration of the hippocampus the cause of Alzheimer’s Disease
--Long term memories make a stop here before going into long term storage
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KEY QUESTION: How do we retrieve memories?
CORE CONCEPT: Whether memories are implicit or explicit, successful retrieval depends on
how they were encoded and how they are cued
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Implicit Memory: Memory that involved recollection of skills, things you know how to do, preferences that
don’t have to be recalled consciously (unconscious, unintentional forming of learning; ex. skipping
rope, golf swing (sports) → not learned consciously
Explicit Memory: Long-term memory which we store memories of fact (conscious, recall of memory; ex.
study/writing exams, appointment) → learned consciously
Retrieval Cues
Retrieval cues: Prompt that helps us remember (stimuli used in recall of memory)
Priming: Implicit memory which exposure to one stimulus influences response to another stimulus (the
unconscious stimulation of memory)
Recognition: Identifying something you learned previously (ex. multiple choice exam)
Encoding Specificity Principle: Principle stating that retrieval will be more successful when cues
available
during recall are similar to those present when the material was first encoded
(manner in which we encode)
Mood Congruent Memory: When human store memories, they not only store the event but also the
mood
they were in at that time (your mood dictates your memories- typically; ex. good
mood→ listens to light hearted music, recall good memories)
Good mood→ good memories
Bad mood→ bad memories
TOT Phenomenon: “On the Tip of Your Tongue” - An experience which people are sure they know
something but can’t seem to bring it to mind
(inability to recall a word while knowing it)
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KEY QUESTION: Why Does Memory Sometimes Fail Us?
CORE CONCEPT: Most of our memory problems arise from memory’s Seven Sins…
Which are really byproducts of otherwise adaptive features of human memory
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Ebbinghaus’ Forgetting Curve: Curve describing how the ability of brain to retain information
decreases in time which Hermann Ebbinghaus used himself to test
3. Blocking: Item in memory that was previously stored information is preventing from learning and
remembering new information
Proactive Interference: Previously stored information prevents learning and remembering new
information
Serial Position Effect: Form of interference related to sequence which you are unable to remember
the
middle part of the sequence, just the beginning and end
4. Misattribution: A memory fault that occurs when memories are retrieved but are associated with the
wrong place, time, or person
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Misinformation Effect: Distortion of memory by suggestibility or misinformation
Fabricated Memories: False memory or distorted recollection of an event that did not actually happen
Eyewitness Accounts: A person who actually sees some act, occurrence, or thing and can give a
firsthand account of it
Recovered Memory Controversy: Controversial issue of whether one should trust recovered
memories of abuse (childhood experience of being abused)
Expectancy Bias: A tendency to distort recalled events to make them fit one’s expectations
Self-Consistency Bias: Commonly held idea that we are more consistent in our attitudes, opinions,
and
beliefs than we actually are
Mnemonics: Techniques for improving memory, especially by making connection between new material
and information already stored
Method of Loci: Mnemonic technique that involves associating items of a list with a sequence of
familiar
physical locations
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