Disabilities/Diseases
Memory
Forgetting
Biological Foundations of Memory
Retention
100

This is a general term describing memory loss

What is amnesia?

100

These memories are our conscious memories of facts and experiences

What are explicit/declarative memories?

100

This is the distortion of one's memories as a result of misleading information

What is the misinformation effect?

100

Emotional center of the brain

What is the amygdala?

100
This is the encoding on a basic level, simply based on structure or appearance of words

What is shallow encoding?

200

This disease begins as difficulty to remember information, and slowly progresses into inability to do everyday tasks

What is Alzheimer's Disease?

200

These memories are our skills and conditioned associations

What are implicit/nondeclarative memories?

200

This term is French for "already seen"

What is déjà vu?

200

This brain structure is involved in the formation of explicit memories

What is the hippocampus?

200

By extracting meaning, we improve this process

What is encoding/mnemonics?

300

This disorder is marked by inattention and hyperactivity that interferes with functioning or development

What is ADHD?

300

These memories, typically emotional, are extremely clear and vivid

What are flashbulb memories?

300

Faulty memory for how, when, or where information was learned/imagined

What is source amnesia/source misattribution?

300

These are deep brain structures involved in motor movement

What are the basal ganglia?

300

These memories were theorized by Sigmund Freud to be repressed, but have been shown to be remembered but intrusive

What is a traumatic/emotional memory?

400

This condition of neurodevelopmental origin mainly affects the ease with which a person reads, writes, and spells

What is Dyslexia?

400

This is a momentary sensory memory of auditory stimuli

What is echoic memory?

400

This phenomenon tells us that memories are often not faded, but are simply not retrieved

What is the tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon?

400

Damage to this organ prevents the development of conditioned reflexes

What is the cerebellum?

400

During the retrieval of memories, this process alters the memory before storing it again

What is reconsolidation?

500

This is a loss of cognitive function, but is not necessarily a specific disease

What is dementia?

500

Our tendency to recall best the first and last items in a list

What is the serial position effect?

500
People with anterograde amnesia still have the ability to make this form of memories

What are implicit memories/skills?

500

People with damage to this have trouble remembering verbal information

What is the left hippocampus?

500

This scientist measured his retention using nonsense syllables

Who is Hermann Ebbinghaus?

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