Chapter 8 - Memory Flashcards
The processes of gaining new information and placing it in memory
Acquisition
A memory deficit suffered after some kinds of brain damage, in which the patient seems unable to form new explicit memories however memories aquired before the injury are spared
Anterograde amnesia
A process of reorganizing or recoding materials in working memory by combining a number of items into a single large unit
Chunking
The way of improving retrieval by re-creating the state of mind that accompanied the initial learning
Context reinstatement
Knowledge of information that can be expressed in words
Declarative knowledge
An approach to memorization that involves focusing on the meaning of the stimulus
Deep processing
A common procedure for studying memory in which participants read and then immediately record a list of related words, but the word proving the “theme” for the lust is not included
DRM paradigm
The hypothesis that when information is stored in memory it is not recorded in its original form but translated into a form that includes the thoughts and understandings of the learner
Encoding specificity
Memory for specific events and experiences
Episodic memory
Conscious memories that can be described at will and can be triggered by a direct question
Explicit memories
A general sense that a certain stimulus has been encountered Before
Familiarity
Vivid, detailed memories said to be produced by unexpected and emotionally important events
Flashbulb memories
The graphic pattern representing the relationship between measures of learning and the length of the retention interval: as the retention interval gets longer, memory decreases
Forgetting curve
Memories that we may not recall consciously, but that are still demonstrable through an indirect test
Implicit memory
Learning without trying to learn, and often without awareness that learning is occurring
Incidental learning