Encoding essentials
The Biological Hard Drive
Storage & Retrieval
Why We Forget
Memory Glitches
100

This is the definition of learning that persists over time through the encoding, storage, and retrieval of information

What is memory?

100

This brain structure acts as a "save button" for explicit memories, helping process them for long-term storage

What is the hippocampus?

100

According to George Miller, this is the "magical number" of items that our short-term memory can typically hold at one time

 What is seven (plus or minus two)?

100

If an individual can remember their past but cannot form new memories after a brain injury, they are suffering from this condition

What is anterograde amnesia?

100

This "frailest part of a memory" involves misattributing the origin of an event we have experienced, heard about, or imagined

What is source amnesia (or source misattribution)?

200

This effortful processing strategy involves organizing items into familiar, manageable units, like remembering a phone number in segments

What is chunking?

200

While the hippocampus handles facts, these two structures are key for storing your implicit memories, like how to ride a bike or a conditioned reflex

What are the cerebellum and basal ganglia?

200

This is our tendency to recall the last and first items in a list better than the items in the middle

What is the serial position effect?

200

This type of interference occurs when older information you’ve learned (like an old password) makes it difficult to recall new informatio

What is proactive interference?

200

This is the eerie sense that "I've been in this exact situation before," which may occur when functions of the temporal lobe, hippocampus, and frontal lobe are out of sync

What is déjà vu?

300

These are the two tracks of our "dual-track" mind: one for memories we consciously know (declarative) and one for memories that skip conscious encoding (nondeclarative)

What are explicit and implicit memories?

300

This term refers to the increased efficiency of potential neural firing after brief, rapid stimulation, which provides a neural basis for learning

What is long-term potentiation (LTP)?

300

This is the "wakening of associations"—the often unconscious activation of particular associations in memory, like seeing a "missing child" poster and then seeing an ambiguous adult-child interaction as a kidnapping

What is priming?

300

 Much of what we "forget" is actually this—a failure to ever record the information into our long-term memory in the first place

What is encoding failure?

300

This effect occurs when we incorporate misleading information into our memory of an event, often after being exposed to subtle suggestions

What is the misinformation effect?

400

This phenomenon explains why you’ll remember more of this unit if you study for 15 minutes every night this week rather than "cramming" for three hours the night before the test

What is the spacing effect?

400

 When you are emotionally aroused or stressed, this part of the brain boosts activity in memory-forming areas to ensure you remember the event

What is the amygdala?

400

This principle states that cues and contexts specific to a particular memory will be most effective in helping us recall it—like doing better on an exam if you take it in the same seat where you learned the material

What is the encoding specificity principle (or context-dependent memory)?

400

This type of interference occurs when new learning (like a new song’s lyrics) disrupts your ability to recall old information

What is retroactive interference?

400

Memory researchers use this term to describe the process where previously stored memories, when retrieved, are potentially altered before being stored again

What is reconsolidation?

500

This level of processing yields the best retention because it encodes words based on their meaning rather than just their structure or sound

What is deep processing (or semantic encoding)?

500

This is the process by which memories move from the hippocampus to the cortex for long-term storage, a process often supported by sleep

What is memory consolidation?

500

This is the fleeting sensory memory of visual stimuli, which lasts no more than a few tenths of a second

What is iconic memory?

500

Hermann Ebbinghaus discovered that the course of forgetting is initially rapid but then levels off with time, a concept known by this name

What is the forgetting curve (or storage decay)?

500

This is a clear, vivid memory of an emotionally significant moment or event, such as where you were during a major national tragedy

 What is a flashbulb memory?