Memory Flashcards

1
Q

Working memory

A
  • More dynamic than short term memory

- Limited capacity (stores 7 +/- 2 pieces of memory)

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2
Q

Long term memory

A
  • Rehearsal and elaboration allows the consolidation of working memory to long term memory
  • Very large capacity
  • Stored for a few mins
  • Processes involved:
    1) Long term potentiation – neural pathways changed
    2) Metabolic activity a few mins-hrs after stimulus presented (subjected to interference)
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3
Q

Procedural memory

A

-Memory for how to do things or skills
E.g. driving a car
-Often occur in absence of conscious recollection

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4
Q

Declarative memory

A

-Memory for facts
E.g. Birthdays
-Encompasses semantic and episodic memory

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5
Q

Semantic memory

A

-Memory for facts, ideas

E.g. what is the capital of France

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6
Q

Episodic memory

A
  • Memory for events centred around you (autobiographical)

- Preferentially stored

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7
Q

3 Key Stages

A

1) Encoding
2) Storage
3) Retrieval

*Failure to remember/forgetting something is due to failure of any of these 3 stages

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8
Q

Interference

A

1) Retroactive interference
- New info affects the ability to retain old info

2) Proactive interference
- Old info affects ability to retain new info

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9
Q

Factors affecting the Retrieval process

A

1) Levels of processing – elaborate/superficial
2) Organisation
3) Context (i.e. state dependent memory)
- Being at the same place/emotional state as encoding facilitates recall

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10
Q

Recognition

A
  • Stimulus has been previously encountered; a sense of familiarity
  • Information is encoded in cue
  • Recognition can be either from cue directly or mental search of LTM store
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11
Q

Recall

A
  • Reconstruction of stimuli using info from cue and info from LTM
  • Greater cognitive demand than Recognition
  • Checked by process of Recognition
  • Recall can be either from cue directly or arise after problem-solving strategy employed
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12
Q

Forget

A
  • Main causes of forgetting from WM or LTM due to:
    1) Passage of time
  • Rapid decay of info from WM
  • Cell death leads to loss of info from LTM
    2) Interference
  • Interferes with ability to store info from WM (retroactive/proactive)
  • Neural pathways remoulded over time in LTM
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13
Q

Amnesia

A

Occurs due to:

1) Damage/trauma
2) Disease (e.g. Alzheimer’s)
3) Chronic alcohol abuse (i.e. Korsakoff’s syndrome)
4) Reversible brain disease (e.g. hydrocephalus)
5) Psychogenic memory loss (e.g. abuse, war)

Anterograde amnesia
-inability to store new info after trauma

Retrograde amnesia:
-inability to recall info prior to trauma

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14
Q

Clinical uses

A

Factors that aid memory:

1) Higher IQ
2) Greater medical info
3) Higher anxiety levels

Factors that helps patients to remember info:

1) Primacy-recency effect (remember the beginning and end of list, at the expense of the intermediates)
2) Overall length of the information is kept short
3) Information is important and self-relevant
4) Short words and sentences used
5) Organised
6) Repeated
7) Instructions given are concrete and explicit

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