How we encode
What we encode
Important
People
Hippocampus and Cerebellum
Types of forgetting
100
When you absorb an enormous amount of information with little or no effort, you__
What is automatically process?
100
These are the three ways we encode things.
What is Visual (images), acoustic (sounds), and semantic (meaning)?
100
They created the three-stage of memory including sensory, short term, and long term memory.
Who is Atkinson-Schiffrin?
100
A neutral center that is located in the limbic system and helps process explicit memories for storage.
What is the hippocampus?
100
These are the three sins of forgetting.
What is absent-mindedness, transience, and blocking?
200
In automatic processing, you process these three things.
What is time, frequency, and space?
200
These were developed by ancient Greek scholars as aids to remembering lengthy passages and speeches.
What is mnemonic devices?
200
He proposed that working memory contains auditory and visual processing.
Who is Alan Baddeley?
200
The brain region extending out from the rear of the brainstem that plays a key role in forming and storing the implicit memories created by classical conditioning.
What is the cerebellum?
200
These are the three sins of disortion.
What is misattribution, suggestibility, and bias?
300
This type of processing leads to durable and accessible memories.
What is effortful processing?
300
We more easily recall information when we organize it into meaningful units when we use the process ___.
What is chunking?
300
He studied rehearsal using nonsense syllables, such as TUV YOF GEK and XOZ.
Who is Hermann Ebbinghaus?
300
A part in the neural center in the limbic system that processesnexplicit memory.
What is the hippocampus?
300
When information never enters our long-term memory and we cannot remember what we fail to encode is called__.
What is Encoding failure?
400
Conscious repition, or __, can boost our memory when learning novel information.
What is rehearsal?
400
These three types of encoding are also known as shallow, intermediate, and deep.
What is Structural, phonemic, and semantic encoding?
400
He argued that sensory memory capacity was larger that what was originally thought.
Who is George Sperling?
400
The Hippocampus subregions do these two things.
What is associating names with faces and engaging in spatial mnemonics?
400
The gradual fading of the physical memory trace, or the accumulation of other learning that disrupts our retrieval is this.
What is storage decay?
500
We retain information better when our rehearsal is distributed over time which is known as this.
What is the spacing effect?
500
Complex information broken down into broad concepts and further subdivided into categories and subcategories is called__.
What is hierarchy?
500
They measured the duration of working memory by manipulating memory.
Who is Brown-Peterson?
500
This memory system helps explain infantile amnesia.
What is our dual explicit-implicit memory system?
500
This occurs when new information makes it harder to recall something you learned earlier.
What is retroactive interference?