Memory
Memory (1)
Stages of memory
Forgetting/Improving (1)
Forgetting/Improving (2)
100

This is the process by which we recollect prior experiences, information, and skills learned in the past. 

Memory

100

This is the memory of a specific event.

Episodic Memory
100

This memory is the immediate recording of data that enters our senses. 

sensory memory

100
This is the fading away of memories over time.

decay

100

Relating information to existing knowledge is also called what?

elaborative rehearsal

200

This is a vivid and enduring memory often associated with a significant or emotional event. 

Flashbulb memory

200

This is the memory of facts, words, concepts, etc. 

Sematic Memory

200

What memory holds mental traces of sounds?

Echoic Memory

200

This is the rare severe memory loss that is often caused by trauma to the brain. 

Amnesia

200

How long does it take for sensory memory to decay?

seconds

300

What is explicit memory?

Memory of specific information that we have to consciously work to remember.

300

What is Implicit Memory?

Information we remember unconsciously and effortlessly. Includes learned habits and skills. 

300

What is the primacy and recency effect?

The ability to better remember the first and last items in a series of information.

300

This is when our minds purposely forget information that disturbs us.

Repression

300

Similar to maintenance rehearsal, this is using repetition to transfer information into your short and long term memories.

Drill and Practice 
400

This is linking information to what we already know. 

Elaborative rehearsal

400
What is maintenance rehearsal? 

Repeatedly saying or thinking about information to keep it active in your memory.

400

These are the mental representations we form of the world by organizing bits of information. 

Schemas

400

What is infantile amnesia?

Forgetting episodic memories from our early lives

400

This is when people forget the period leading up to an injury.

Retrograde Amnesia

500

What does context dependent retrieval mean? 

Remembering is easier when the retrieval environment matches the learning environment. 

500

What does state dependent retrieval mean?

Remembering is easier when mood during retrieval matches your mood when the information was encoded. 

500

What is photographic memory also called?

Eidetic 

500

This is when people lose the ability to store new memories

Anterograde Amnesia
500

What is an example of a Mnemonic device?

Student examples/ songs, jingles, acronyms, sayings, etc

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