Memory Flashcards

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1
Q

sensory memory

A
  • lasts seconds
  • connection between perception and memory
  • iconic memory: sensory memory for vision (George Sperling) - “partial report” - Ps can only remember for a few seconds
  • Ulric Neisser - “icon” lasts 1 second. backward masking if new image is presented before last one fades, erasing original. more successful if similar to 1st
  • echoic memory - sensory memory for auditory sensations
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2
Q

Short-term memory (STM)

A
  • lasts seconds or minutes
  • working memory - needed to perform task at hand
  • George Miller: capacity of 7 items (+/- 2)
  • Chunking can increase STM capacity
  • largely auditory, items coded phonologically
  • rehearsal transfers memory to LTM. primary (maintenance) rehearsal involves repetition. secondary (elaborative) rehearsal involves organizing and understanding material to transfer it to LTM
  • interference - disrupting info before items is “proactive interference” and causes “proactive inhibition” in recalling items. after items is “retroactive”
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3
Q

Long-term memory (LTM)

A
  • permanent retention is possible
  • items learned semantically (for meaning)
  • recognition e.g. multiple choice
  • recall: cued recall e.g. fill in the blank, free recall - remembering with no cue
  • savings - measures how much info remains in LTM by assessing how long it takes to learn something the 2nd time
  • encoding specificity principle - easier to remember if in context in which it was stored
  • subject to interference effects
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4
Q

Episodic vs. semantic memory

A

episodic - details, events, discrete knowledge

semantic - general knowledge of world

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5
Q

procedural vs. declarative memory

A

procedural - knowing how to do something

declarative - knowing a fact

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6
Q

explicit vs. implicit memory

A

explicit - being aware of knowing something

implicit - not being aware of knowing something e.g. amnesia patient’s performance on task

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7
Q

reconstructive memory

A

Frederick Bartlett - people are more likely to remember ideas/semantics than details/grammar

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8
Q

Dual code hypothesis

A

items will be better remembered if encoded both visually and semantically

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9
Q

paired-associate learning

A

(behaviorist theory) one item is learned with and cues the recall of another. e.g. learning a foreign language and knowing that “hola” is “hello”

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10
Q

Elizabeth Loftus

A

memory of traumatic events is altered by event itself and way questions about event are phrased

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11
Q

Brenda Milner, patient HM

A

lesion of hippocampus to treat epilepsy. remembered things from before surgery and STM was intact but could not store long-term memories

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12
Q

serial learning

A

learning a list

  • recency & primacy effects
  • serial position curve (U-shaped)
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13
Q

serial-anticipation learning

A

asked to recall one item at a time rather than entire list

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14
Q

factors that make list items easier to learn

A
  • acoustic & semantic dissimilarity
  • brevity
  • familiarity
  • concreteness
  • meaning
  • importance
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15
Q

decay theory

A

aka trace theory: memories fade with time

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16
Q

interference theory

A

competing info blocks memory retrieval

17
Q

generation-recognition model

A

recognition is easier than recall (multiple choice is easier than essay)

18
Q

clustering

A

tendency to group together similar items in memory whether learned together or not

19
Q

incidental learning

A

learning when not intended

20
Q

eidetic imagery

A

photographic memory. more common in children and rural countries

21
Q

flashbulb memories

A

recollections that seem burned into brain e.g. where were you when JFK died

22
Q

tachtiscope

A

instrument used to present visual material for a fraction of a second

23
Q

Zeigarnik effect

A

tendency to recall uncompleted tasks better than completed ones