Semantic Memory
Episodic Memory
Memory in the Brain
Retrieval
Incidental Forgetting
100

What is spreading activation?

When a memory is retrieved, related memories are activated.

100

What is the generation effect?

Generating your own answers or examples improves memory.

100

What is neurogenesis and where does it occur?

Growth of new neurons; hippocampus.

100

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

When you know a word but can't retrieve it.

100

What is proactive interference?

When older memories interfere with newer memories.

200

Modality-specific regions of the brain correspond to what part of the hub-and-spoke model?

Spokes

200

What is the dual-coding hypothesis?

Imaginable words are encoded both verbally and through sensation, resulting in a stronger memory.

200

This type of retrieval does not rely on the frontal lobe.

Recognition

200

What term explains why it's easier to recall information you learned while high if you are high during retrieval.

State-dependent memory

200

What is reconsolidation?

When memories are retrieved they enter a fragile state and are then consolidated again.

300

What disorder is characterized by a degeneration of the "hub" in the hub and spoke model?

Semantic dementia

300

What does cortical reinstatement mean?

When we retrieve a memory, regions representing information in that memory are activated.

300

This part of the brain is important for integrating new information into existing information.

Ventromedial PFC

300

What is encoding specificity?

When the context matches between encoding and retrieval, that context can serve as a retrieval cue.

300

What is a counterpoint to trace decay as a primary form of forgetting?

Doesn't explain initial rapid forgetting, how the rate of forgetting decreases over time, or why we can recall very old memories.
400

What does the hub represent in the hub-and-spokes model (not what brain region).

General representation of a concept

400

What types of memories seem to rely on structures surrounding the hippocampus (i.e., the ones that were also removed for HM)?

Familiarity and semantic memory

400

What part of the brain is more active when inhibiting retrieval of competitors (i.e., inhibiting saying banana instead of orange when prompted to say a fruit).

The prefrontal cortex
400

What does reconstructive memory refer to?

When we piece a memory together, sometimes filling in blanks with schemas.

400

What is retrieval-induced forgetting?

Retrieving one memories impairs memories for un-retrieved but related memories.

500

Stimulating the ___________ with tDCS would result in improved semantic memory. 

Anterior temporal pole

500

How does systems consolidation work?

The hippocampus coordinates activity in cortex, helping bind regions together. Then it likely becomes less involved over time, resulting in a memory trace just in cortical connections.

500

A lesion here would result in a loss of familiarity.

Perirhinal cortex

500

What aspect of recognition relies on attentional processes?

Recollection

500

What causes retrieval-induced forgetting (the answer is not retrieval).

During retrieval we inhibitor competitor memories, which weakens our ability to recall these later.

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