Stages
Types
Retrieval
Memory Failure
The Brain
To Forget or Not
General
Recall
100

What are the three types of memory?

Sensory, Short Term, and Long Term

100

This type of memory: Speaking, seeing, and using all of your senses.

What is sensory memory?

100

the process of preserving information for possible recollection in the future (next step after encoding)

What is storage?

100

data never entered your memory; failure to process information into memory

What is an encoding failure?

100

promotes memory 

What is sleep?

100

encoding failure, storage failure, retrieval failure, proactive interference, retroactive interference

Why do we forget?

100

you can remember up to 7 units, bits, or items without a lot of difficulty

What is short term memory?

100

reproducing information from memory in the order in which it was learned; associated with memorization

What is serial recall?

200
captures exact copies of vast information (of sensory stimuli) for a sliver of time

What is sensory memory?

200

This type of memory lasts several minutes. 5-9 chunks of information.

What is working memory?

200

process of accessing information encoded and stored in memory

What is retrieval?

200

although the information is retained in the memory store, it cannot be accessed (tip of the tongue phenomenon)

What is retrieval failure?

200

thalamus, amygdala, hippocampus, cerebellum

What are the 4 primary areas of the brain involved in memory?

200

Said, "We remember the high points of a memory  and reconstruct it from there."

Who is Herman Ebbinghaus?

200

memory of facts and experiences that one can consciously know and "declare"; you are aware of having this type of memory

What is explicit memory?

200

learning procedure in which material that has been learned may be repeated in any order

What is free recall?

300

has almost unlimited capacity and can hold onto information indefinitely

What is long term memory?
300

unconscious memory of how to carry out a variety of skills and activities (implicit memory)

What is procedural memory?

300

Grouping numbers, letters, or other items into recognizable subsets as a strategy for increasing the quantity of information maintained in short-term memory

What is chunking?

300

memories may decay over time; memory lapses

What is storage failure?

300

the act of filling in memory gaps

What is confabulation?

300

A detailed account of circumstances surrounding an emotionally significant or shocking, sometimes historic, event.

What is a flashbulb memory?

300

a memory of something you know or know how to do, which may be automatic, unconscious, and difficult to bring to awareness, and express

What is implicit memory?

300

recalling vivid memories of an event

What is episodic recall?

400

can temporarily maintain and process limited information for longer periods of time (about 30 seconds, if no distractions)

What is short term memory?

400

record of memorable experiences including when and where an experience occurred (explicit memory)

What is episodic memory?

400

technique for improving memory 

What is mnemonic?

400

tendency for information learned in the past to interfere with retrieval of new information


DAILY DOUBLE

What is proactive interference?

400

subjective feeling that one is experiencing a genuine recollection, with sensory details, and even expressed with confidence and emotion, even though the event never happened

What are false memories?

400

an inability to form new memories following damage to the brain

What is anterograde amnesia?

400

A moment that is immediately stored in long term memory

Flashbulb moment/memory

400

most basic type of recall; (shower, instrument, driving)

What is procedural recall?

500

brain processes involved in the encoding, storage, and retrieval of information

What is memory?

500

Facts about the world, available to anyone

What is semantic memory?

500

Serial, Free, Episodic, Procedural, Somatic, Eidetic

What are the types of recall?

500

the tendency for recently learned information to interfere with the retrieval of things learned in the past

What is retroactive interference?

500

A neural center located in the limbic system that helps process explicit memories for storage; allows for long term storage of memories

What is the role of the hippocampus?

500

an inability to retrieve information from one's past prior to drain damage

What is retrograde amnesia?

500

explicit, implicit, and flashbulb

What are the types of long term memory?

500

facts and general knowledge

What is somatic memory?