The creation of a permanent record of information. In order for a memory to make its way to this, it must pass through sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory.
What is storage?
What is flashbulb memory?
" The loss of long-term memory that occurs as the result of disease, physical trauma, or psychological trauma" (Spielman et al., 2022).
What is amnesia?
Organizing information into smaller pieces to make it easier to remember.
What is chunking?
"the set of processes used to encode, store, and retrieve information over different periods of time"(Spielman et al., 2022).
What is memory?
What is regulating emotions?
The two common types of amnesia.
PEMDAS, which stands for the order in which you should approach a mathematical equation, is an example of this memory aid.
What is a mnemonic device?
The input of sensory information into our memory system.
What is encoding?
These are the main four parts of the brain that deal with memory.
What is the amygdala, hippocampus, cerebellum, and the prefrontal cortex?
This is the effect of misinformation from an outside source and how it can create false memories.
What is suggestibility?
When you think about something "more deeply and link it to other information and memories to make it more meaningful" (Spielman et al., 2022).
The specific process that includes encoding of details like the meaning of words, time, frequency and more.
What is automatic processing?
Injury to this part of the brain results in the inability to create and store new memories.
What is the hippocampus?
According to cognitive psychologist Elizabeth Loftus, an eye witnesses memory of a specific event can be very flexible due to this.
What is the misinformation effect?
Studying across small durations instead of studying for long periods of time.
What is distributed practice?
A specific type of encoding. Defined as "The encoding of words and their meaning is" (Spielman et al., 2022)
What is semantic encoding?
The theory that stronger emotions trigger stronger memories to be formed.
What is arousal theory?
An example of this would be the memory of your old phone number interfering with the recall of you trying to remember your new phone number.
What is proactive interference?
A "technique to help make sure information goes from short-term memory to long-term memory" (Spielman et al., 2022).
What is memory-enhancing strategy?