psychology memory

    Cards (33)

    • Memory
      The encoding, storage and retrieval of stored information
    • Types of memory
      • Episodic memory
      • Semantic memory
      • Procedural memory
    • Episodic memory

      • Memories of personal events or experiences
    • Semantic memory

      • Memory for facts and general knowledge
    • Procedural memory
      • Memory that helps us recall information on complicated skills
    • Forms of encoding
      • Acoustic encoding
      • Visual encoding
      • Semantic encoding
    • Acoustic encoding
      Holding information in memory in the form of sound
    • Visual encoding
      Processing information visually in the form of a picture in the mind
    • Semantic encoding
      Encoding something through its meaning
    • Retrieval systems
      • Recall
      • Recognition
      • Re-learning
    • Recall
      Remembering information by searching memory
    • Recognition
      Being presented with items and asked if you remember them from a previous exposure
    • Re-learning
      Being exposed to something learned previously but forgotten, and re-learning it faster
    • Multi-store model of memory
      • Consists of sensory, short-term and long-term memory stores
    • Sensory store
      Stores sensory information, has large capacity but short duration
    • Short-term memory store
      Stores information through rehearsal, has limited duration and capacity
    • Long-term memory store

      Stores information processed through elaborate or maintenance rehearsal, has unlimited duration and capacity
    • Primacy effect
      Items at the beginning of a list are more likely to be remembered
    • Recency effect
      Items at the end of a list are more likely to be remembered
    • Murdock's serial position curve study (1962) provided evidence for the multi-store model of memory
    • Murdock's study found that the words at the end of the list and the beginning of the list were recalled the best
    • Recency effect
      Words recalled at the end of the list were still in the short-term memory store
    • Primacy effect
      Words recalled at the beginning of the list had time to be rehearsed and transferred to the long-term memory store
    • Words in the middle were the least remembered
    • A distractor task took up the capacity of the short-term memory store, making it harder to recall words from the end of the list
    • Bartlett proposed the reconstructive explanation of memory, suggesting memories are "reconstructed" and interpreted to fit the individual's hopes, fears, emotions and previous experiences
    • Bartlett's "War of the Ghosts" study
      1. Participants passed on a story, altering details to fit their own experiences and culture
      2. Ghosts were omitted, the story was recalled more logically, and details were changed to more familiar concepts
    • Bartlett's reconstructive memory model

      • Memory is not an accurate recording, but is constructed and reconstructed to fit the individual's understanding
      • Individuals try to make sense of unfamiliar information by relating it to what they already know
    • Effort after meaning
      People try to make sense of something unfamiliar by changing their memories into versions that are more sensible to them
    • Proactive interference
      Old memories interfere with remembering new information
    • Retroactive interference
      New memories interfere with recalling old information
    • Research has shown false memories can be easily planted in people
    • Context
      The sights, sounds, smells and textures around us when encoding information become part of the memory, and returning to that context can aid recall
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