Chapter 9 - The Knowing Mind Flashcards
info processing model
compares human brain to a computer
1. encoding
2. storage
3. retrieval
3-stage model of memory
- proposed by Atkinson-Shrifflin in 1968
- 3 areas:
1. sensory memory
2. short-term memory
3. long-term memory
sensory memory
- raw sensations before perception
- large capacity, short stay
iconic = photo (less than a second)
echoic = auditory (3-4 seconds)
short-term memory
- limited capacity (7 +/- 2 chunks)
- limited time (30 seconds)
- rehearsal keeps info longer
- chunking allows more storage
long-term memory
- (theoretically) unlimited storage
- detail level varies
- info can be permanent but distorted
- feeds back into STM
LTM types
- procedural (muscle memory, accessed implicitly, resistant to amnesia)
- episodic (personal experiences)
- semantic (general knowledge)
hippocampus
memory “gateway” (save button)
- used for explicit memory (words, events, smells, sights) transferred during sleep
cerebellum & basal ganglia
store implicit (automatic) memories
- includes classical conditioning & procedural memories
amygdala
connects emotions to memories (flashbulb)
conceptual networks
memories = stored/retrieved by connecting with other memories (your brain keeps files)
- this is why memories are prone to reconstruction/inaccuracies
elaborative rehearsal
connecting the new memory to existing memories
anterograde amnesia
inability to learn new memories, most common
retrograde amnesia
inability to recall old memories, less common
amnesia
usually due to damage to the hippocampus