Lobes of the brain
Parts of the brain
Sensory and Working memory
Learning
Short and Long term memory
100

This lobe of the brain processes sight. It is on the opposite side of the head from the eyes.

What is the occipital lobe?

100

Our center for memories, knowing where things are spatially, helps with learning.

What is the hippocampus?
100

A buffer memory system to host the incoming stream of information long enough for us to pay attention to it

What is sensory memory?

100

The change in behavior that results from experience

What is learning?

100

The process of moving a memory from STM to LTM

What is encoding?

200

This lobe of the brain processes sound. It contains the hippocampus, Wernicke’s area, and the amygdala.

What is the temporal lobe?

200

Where our emotions are active, it helps us feel fear.

What is the amygdala?

200

The set of mechanisms that underlie STM also communicates with long-term memory. The semipermanent memory store that aids us in learning new information.

What is working memory?

200

Experimented on himself, used nonsense syllables as the items to be remembered. Determined how many runs through a list of nonsense syllables it would take to recite a list perfectly.

Who is Ebbinghaus and his learning curve?

200

Aka Procedural memory, the ability to develop motor skills. Remembering or learning how to do things

What is implicit or non-declarative memory?

300

This lobe of the brain processes higher-level thinking, and it does not fully develop until about the age of 25.

What is the frontal lobe?

300

Tries to regulate our body's homeostasis. Reacts to changes in temperature, hunger, thirst, etc. Also plays a role in the SAM and HPAC systems.

Hypothalamus
300

Temporary storehouse/integrative system, gathers and combines information from the phonological loop, visuospatial sketchpad, and ltm

What is the episodic buffer?

300

A mental process can be compared with the operations of a computer. A mental process can be interpreted as information progressing through the system in a series of stages, one step at a time.

What is the information processing approach?

300

Has the memory of knowledge of facts, language, and the world. It also contains a type of memory ability to recall single personal events (memories for events that happened to you)

What is explicit or declarative memory? (Semantic and episodic memory)

400

This lobe of the brain processes what is around us, where we are in space, and how items feel.

What is the parietal lobe?

400

Helps us stay balanced. AKA the 'mini brain'.

What is the cerebellum?

400

Temporary storage of auditory information. Processes a limited number of sounds for a short period of time.

What is the phonological loop?

400

What you know now makes it difficult to recall something that occurred previously. New interferes with old.

What is retroactive interference? (Retro is actively interfered with)

400

Suggested that people can remember about 7 items, give or take two. Called a "chunk" a memory unit

Who is George Miller and his Magic number 7?

500

This part of the brain is present in all living animals. Controls our breathing, heart rate, and balance.

What is the brainstem?

500

Acts like the 'post office' for our brain. Relays information to the parts of the brain that need it.

What is the thalamus?

500

Processes both visual and spatial information, contains the visual cache (temporarily stores visual information) and the inner scribe (stores visual data and spatial info)

What is the Visuospatial Sketchpad?

500

Something you have already learned interferes with your ability to recall more recent events. (Old interfering with new)

What is proactive interference? (Pro is actively interfered with)

500
Had participants remember 3 items and count backwards by 3 to prevent rehearsal.
What is the Brown-Peterson Task?