9 - Long Term Memory Flashcards
How is long term memory split? (LTM Cognitive)
Declarative and non-declarative
What can declarative memory be broken in to and what does it mean? (LTM Cognitive)
- Episodic = Specific events
- Semantic = Actual facts and knowledge
What can non-declarative memory be broken in to and what does it mean? (LTM Cognitive)
- Procedural = Sensorimotor and cognitive habits/skills
- Priming = Exposure to one stimulus influencing another
- Simple = Stimulus response behaviour
What type of long term memory is affected by amnesia? (LTM Cognitive)
Declarative
What part of the brain is necessary for episodic memory? (LTM Cognitive)
The hippocampus
What is the difference between episodic and semantic long term memory in terms of content? (LTM Cognitive)
- Episodic = event and its context
- Semantic = general knowledge
What is the difference between episodic and semantic long term memory in terms of time? (LTM Cognitive)
- Episodic = one time
- Semantic = no specific time
What is the difference between episodic and semantic long term memory in terms of emotion? (LTM Cognitive)
- Episodic = emotional
- Semantic = not emotional
What is the difference between episodic and semantic long term memory in terms of modification? (LTM Cognitive)
- Episodic = more vulnerable
- Semantic = less vulnerable
What is the difference between episodic and semantic long term memory in terms of development? (LTM Cognitive)
- Episodic = late development
- Semantic = early development
What did Graham, Becker and Hodges (1997) find in relation to Alzheimer’s/dementia patients and the type of memory? (LTM Cognitive)
- Patients with Alzheimer’s had good episodic and poor semantic memory
- Patients with dementia had poor episodic and good semantic memory
What do autobiographical memories integrate? (LTM Cognitive)
Semantic and episodic memories
What was Milner’s study in 1962 and what was found? (LTM Cognitive)
- Studies procedural memories in amnesiacs
- Mirror trace task
- Patient HM repeated the task over 3 days
- The more he completed the trials, the number of errors reduced, but he did not recall partaking in the tasks
How did Buffers et al (1990) investigate patients with Huntington’s, amnesia and Alzheimer’s and what was found? (LTM Cognitive)
- Tasked of putting a target on a rotating turn table
- Huntington = unable to complete
- Amnesiacs and Alzheimers = very able to complete
What does priming stimuli do? (LTM Cognitive)
Changes the response to a subsequent test stimuli