06 Memory-Part 1
06 Memory-Part 1
PSYCHOLOGY
PSYCH01X
Memory:
Remembrance
of Things Past
– and Future
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Lesson 6
Introduction to Psychology
Learning Outcomes
DEFINE MEMORY AND DIFFERENTIATE EXPLAIN THE PROCESSES OF MEMORY. EXPLAIN THE STAGES OF MEMORY.
BETWEEN TYPES OF MEMORIES.
Learning Outcomes
Semantic memory
• General knowledge
Implicit Memory
• TRUE!
Retrospective Memory Versus
Prospective Memory
• Retrospective memory
– Recalling information previously learned
• Episodic, semantic and implicit memories
• Prospective memory
– Remembering to do things in the future
– May fail due to preoccupation or distraction
Prospective Memory
• FICTION!
Retrieval
• TRUE!
Iconic Memory
• Icons
– Mental representations of visual stimuli
• Brief, but accurate, photographic memories
– Eidetic imagery
• retain exact mental representations of visual stimuli
over long periods of time
• Iconic memory is common, eidetic memory is
not
Echoic Memory
• Echoes
– Mental
representations
of sounds
• Memory traces of
echoes last longer
than icons
Short-Term Memory
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Chunking
571-442-543
Interference in Short-Term Memory
• FICTION!
Long-Term Memory
• TRUE!
Flashbulb Memories
• TRUE!
Tip of the Tongue Phenomenon
• “Feeling of knowing”
– Acoustic and semantic coding may help provide a
useful retrieval cue
– May reflect incomplete learning
Context and State Dependent Memory
• Context dependent
– Better retrieval in context in which information
was originally acquired
• State dependent
– Better retrieval in biological or emotional state in
which it was learned
INTRODUCTION TO
PSYCHOLOGY
PSYCH01X