Chapter 10:Memory Flashcards
Define Memory:
The ability to store and retrieve information over time
Define Storage:
Process of maintaining information in memory over time
Define Encoding:
Process by which we transform what we perceive, think,or feel into an enduring memory
Define Retrieval:
Retrieval: Process of bringing to mind information that has been previously encoded and stored
Explicit Memory:
Act of consciously or intentionally retrieving past experiences
Implicit Memory
Implicit Memory: Influence of past experiences on later behaviour and performance, even though people aren’t trying to recollect them & are not aware that they are remembering them.
Declarative Memory:
Facts and events
Procedural Memory:
Procedural Memory: Gradual acquisition of skills as a result of practice, or “knowing how to do things”
Stages of Memory:
- Sensory Register:Place in which sensory information is kept for a few seconds or less (also: Echoic memory)
- Short Term Storage (working memory): Place where non-sensory information is kept for more than a few seconds but less than a minute
Rehearsal: process of keeping information in short-term memory by repeating it mentally
Chunking: combining small pieces of info into larger chunks or clusters
“Working Memory”: the process of actively maintaining information in short-term storage (Sh-T. Mem. more than passive holding place) - Long Term Storage: Place where information can be kept for hours, days, weeks, or years
3 Types of Long Term Memory
- Episodic Memory: Collection of past personal experiences at particular times and places.
- Semantic Memory: Facts & concepts that make up our general knowledge of the world
- Priming: Enhanced ability to think of a stimulus, such as a word or object, as a result of a recent exposure to the stimulus
Visual Imagery Encoding:
Visual Imagery Encoding: Process of storing new information by converting it into mental pictures
Organizational Encoding:
Act of categorizing information by noticing relationships among a series of items
Elaborative Encoding:
Elaborative Encoding: Process of actively relating new information to knowledge that is already in memory
Semantic, rhyme, and visual judgments (Craig & Tulving 1975)
“Deep” Processing (Craig and Lockhart, 1972)
Memory Encoding
Visual Imagery, organization, elaborative
Memory Retrieval
- Retrieval Cues: External information that is associated with stored information and helps bring it to mind
- Encoding Specificity Principle: Idea that a retrieval cue can serve as effective reminder when it helps re-create the specific way in which information was initially encoded
- State-Dependent Retrieval: Tendency for information to be better recalled when the person is in the same state during encoding and retrieval