Lec 4 (Memory)
Lec 4 (Memory)
Chapter 4
What is Memory?
It
is the process through which we encode, store and retrieve the information.
Encoding:
process of initial recording of info in a form usable to memory Storage: the maintenance of saved material in memory Retrieval: process of bringing info into awareness and then use it
Info
Sensory Memories
Short-term Memory
Long-term Memory
Sensory Memories
Declarative Memory: For factual info. Semantic Memory: for general knowledge and facts about world, rules of logic Episodic Memory: biographical details of our individual lives Procedural Memory: For skills as riding a bicycle
Recalling LM Memories
Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon Retrieval cues: Stimulus that allows us to recall more easily info that is located in LM (more imp when u r recalling instead of recognizing) Levels of processing theory: Emphasizes the degree to which the new material is mentally analyzed. There are shallow, intermediate, deep level of analysis.
Flashbulb memories: Memories of specific, important, or surprising event that are so vivid, they are like a snapshot of the event. Constructive Processes in Memory: Our memory is influenced by schemas. Schemas are organized bodies of info stored in memory that bias the way the new info is interpreted, stored and recalled.
Forgetting
Why do we forget?
Failure
Childrens memories
Memory & Culture
Memory Dysfunctions
Alzheimers disease Amnesia
Retrograde
Karsakoffs syndrome