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Published byReese Hooper Modified over 10 years ago
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Storage How we retain the information we encode
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Review the three stage process of Memory
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Storage and Sensory Memory
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George Sterling’s Experiment:1960 Flash of screen: 1/20 second Subjects recalled about ½ of letters 3 tones: top, middle, bottom: played immediately after visual Subjects could identify all three What does this help prove? All nine letters available for recall- only for a moment
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Iconic / Echoic Memory Iconic: visual “snapshot of great detail”- a photograph like quality lasts only about a second. echoic: If you are not paying attention to someone, you can still recall the last few words said in the past three or four seconds.
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Storage and Short-Term Memory Lasts usually between 3 to 12 seconds. Can store 7 (plus or minus two) chunks of information. We recall digits better than letters. Short-term memory exercise.
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Storage and Long-Term Memory long-term memory: no known limits Rajan: recited 31,811 digits of pi.(3hrs. 49 min. / or 3.5/second!) How? Rhythmic memory: “melodic or jarring”- taps feet, sways right / left At 5 years old, memorized the license plates of parents’ guests (about 75 cars in ten minutes). He still remembers the plates to this day. Numbers only: average with names, words
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Shereshevskii: 1920’s Short term memory: 70 items Forward / Backward / 15 years Journalist / boss furious- never took notes Asylum: went mad: 15 minutes / 5 years: all memories ran together
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How does our brain store long-term memories? Memories do NOT reside in single specific spots of our brain. They are not electrical (if the electrical activity were to shut down in your brain, then restart- you would NOT start with a blank slate).
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Long-Term Potentiation (LTP) The current theory of how our long-term memory works. Nerve cell’s genes produce synapse strengthening proteins /enabling LTM formation Synapse / neurotransmission Neural connections gradually strengthen through rehearsal over time
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Stress and Memory Stress can lead to the release of hormones that have been shown to assist in LTM. Similar to the idea of Flashbulb Memory.
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Types of LTM
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Explicit / Implicit Memory Explicit Memory (Declarative) Semantic memory: “facts about the world” Tenancy to left frontal cortex Episodic Memory: events in our lives Tendency to right frontal cortex Implicit Memory (nondeclarative) Procedural memory- riding a bike / horse
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The Hippocampus Damage to the hippocampus disrupts our memory. Left = Verbal memory Right = Visual / Locations hippocampus = librarian Library = our brain Stores LTM- shelves elsewhere in cortex
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Amygdala Emotional memory Traumatic events PTSD (war veterans) sounds, smells, conditions etc. *Hippocampus and Amygdale work together to form LTM
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