Brain Parts/Mental Shortcuts and Aids
Memory Pt. 1
Memory Pt. 2
Memory Processes/
Impairment
OTPF-IV
100

The outer layer of the brain responsible for higher-level thinking, including memory and problem-solving.

Cerebral Cortex

100

The initial stage of memory that holds sensory information for a very brief period of time.

Sensory Memory

100

The type of memory that has a virtually unlimited capacity and can last from minutes to a lifetime.

Long Term Memory

100

In the three-stage model of memory, this stage involves maintaining encoded information over time.

Storage

100

Performance Skill in the OTPF-IV is described as "Does not look away from task performance, maintaining the ongoing task progression."

Attends

200

These memory aids, like acronyms or rhymes, help facilitate the encoding and retrieval of information.

Mnemonics

200

The type of memory that has a limited capacity and duration, typically holding information for about 20-30 seconds.

Short Term Memories

200

This type of memory involves consciously recalling specific information, such as facts or events.

Explicit Memory

200

What process involves accessing and bringing into consciousness information stored in memory?


Retrieval

200

Performance Skill in the OTPF-IV is described as "Starts or begins the next task action or task step without any hesitation."

Initiates

300

Brain structure that plays a crucial role in the formation of new memories.

Hippocampus

300

Term that describes memory to carry out future events.

Prospective Memory

300

This type of explicit memory involves the recollection of specific events, situations, and experiences.

Episodic Memory

300

This process involves transforming sensory information into a form that can be stored in memory.

Encoding

300

Performance Skill in the OTPF-IV described as "Performs steps in an effective or logical order and with an absence of randomness in the ordering or inappropriate repetition of steps."


Sequences

400

The part of the brain that is important to STM and is part of the process of searching for & retrieving information from LTM.

Pre-frontal Area

400

The term that describes the memory to recall facts. 

Semantic Memory

400

The type of amnesia that occurs in response to trauma or a particularly difficult experience. 

Emotional Amnesia or Dissociative Amnesia

400

This memory impairment affects the ability to recall memories formed before a traumatic event.

Retrograde Amnesia

400

Mental Function in the OTPF-IV described as "Judgment, concept formation, metacognition, executive functions, praxis, cognitive flexibility, insight".

Higher Level Cognitive

500

This brain structure, often associated with emotions, also plays a role in the formation and storage of emotional memories.

Amygdala

500

The type of memory that involves the unconscious recall of information, such as skills and habits.

Implicit Memory

500

The Conceptual Framework for examining cognition.

Cognitive-Information Processing Model

500

What memory deficit prevents the formation of new memories after a specific event, often due to damage to the hippocampus?

Anterograde Amnesia

500

Mental Function in the OTPF-IV described as "State of awareness and alertness, including the clarity and continuity of the wakeful state".

Consciousness

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