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Published byRuth Dennis Modified over 9 years ago
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MEMORY Alanna Denauski Anisha Mohan Urmila Lingala
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Introduction The process by which information is encoded, stored, and retrieved Regions of the brain: Prefrontal Lobe – short term memory stored Hippocampus – long term memory stored
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Short-Term Memory Holds 5 to 9 pieces of information until forgotten or moved into long term memory Duration is between 15 to 30 seconds Comes after sensation – receiving stimuli information
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Working Memory Short term memory that focuses on conscious active processing of incoming stimuli and long term memory Example: Looking at a book you have never seen before, you still know what it is and how to use it because of long term memory
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Long-Term Memory Limitless Received from working and short-term memory Types: Explicit – memories available in consciousness Episodic memory - specific events Semantic memory - knowledge about the world Implicit – memories of body movements and how to use objects
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Encoding Automatic, parallel processing Store and recall informaiton Levels: Visual – picture images Acoustic – sounds and words Semantic - meaning
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Remembering Different cues: Recall – retrieving information not in conscious awareness (Taking a fill-in-the-blank test) Recognition – indentifying items previously learned (Taking a multiple choice test) Relearning – measure of memory that assess the amount of time saved when learning the material for a second time
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Forgetting Absent-mindedness – inattention to details Transience – storage decay over time Blocking – inaccessibility to stored information Misattribution – confusing information sources Suggestibility – lingering affect of misinformation Bias – belief-colored recollection Persistence – unwanted memories
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Disorders Agnosia - inability to recognize certain objects, persons or sounds Amnesia - memory and learning are affected out of all proportion to other cognitive functions Alzheimer's disease - cell to cell connections in the brain are lost Dementia - progressive deterioration of thinking ability and memory
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