Ch07a
... • We refer to our memories as “stored” and “retrieved” as if they were items on a shelf in a warehouse. But this analogy is only partially useful. • The more you know about a topic, the more interested you are in it, the easier it is to establish and retain new information related to the topic. ...
... • We refer to our memories as “stored” and “retrieved” as if they were items on a shelf in a warehouse. But this analogy is only partially useful. • The more you know about a topic, the more interested you are in it, the easier it is to establish and retain new information related to the topic. ...
Create analogies and similes Long-term Memory Summary
... Free On-Line Learning Games (www.zondle.com) has 12,000 topics created by teachers (or you can make your own) and students. Students can use almost any internet-connected device (e.g. phone, netbook, etc.) to communicate their responses Invention Playhouse/Smithsonian http://www.inventionatplay.org/ ...
... Free On-Line Learning Games (www.zondle.com) has 12,000 topics created by teachers (or you can make your own) and students. Students can use almost any internet-connected device (e.g. phone, netbook, etc.) to communicate their responses Invention Playhouse/Smithsonian http://www.inventionatplay.org/ ...
Memory - My Haiku
... - Encoding: external stimuli, sensory registers, selective attention, reticular formation, short-term memory - Storage: long-term memory, explicit memory (semantic and episodic memories) and implicit memories (emotional and procedural memories) - Retrieval ...
... - Encoding: external stimuli, sensory registers, selective attention, reticular formation, short-term memory - Storage: long-term memory, explicit memory (semantic and episodic memories) and implicit memories (emotional and procedural memories) - Retrieval ...
Higher brain functions
... memory lets you retain a piece of information for less than a minute and retrieve it during this time (eg. repeating a list of items that has just been read to you, in their original order. In general, you can retain 5 to 9 items in short-term) • Long-term memory (LTM) includes both our memory of re ...
... memory lets you retain a piece of information for less than a minute and retrieve it during this time (eg. repeating a list of items that has just been read to you, in their original order. In general, you can retain 5 to 9 items in short-term) • Long-term memory (LTM) includes both our memory of re ...
Section 3: Dissociative Disorders
... traumatic event • Can’t remember anything surrounding event • May even forget identity • Memory returns as suddenly as it was lost • Wartime and natural disasters huge causes ...
... traumatic event • Can’t remember anything surrounding event • May even forget identity • Memory returns as suddenly as it was lost • Wartime and natural disasters huge causes ...
Ch05x
... in the monkey’s PF cortex during an attentional task. Neural responding is indicated by an asterisk (*). (a) A cue square is flashed at a particular position, causing the neuron to respond. (b) The square goes off , but the neuron continues to respond during the delay. (c) The fixation X goes off , ...
... in the monkey’s PF cortex during an attentional task. Neural responding is indicated by an asterisk (*). (a) A cue square is flashed at a particular position, causing the neuron to respond. (b) The square goes off , but the neuron continues to respond during the delay. (c) The fixation X goes off , ...
Types of Memory
... Rats are good swimmers but don't seem to enjoy it. Because of this, they hunt for the platform and tend to quickly find it. Rats are also very good at remembering the location of the platform. Presumably they remember the platform location with respect to landmarks around the pool. When placed in th ...
... Rats are good swimmers but don't seem to enjoy it. Because of this, they hunt for the platform and tend to quickly find it. Rats are also very good at remembering the location of the platform. Presumably they remember the platform location with respect to landmarks around the pool. When placed in th ...
Remembering What Matters
... attention…. I argue that the multiple-component perspective and the singleattentional-system perspective are complementary, with each best suited to asking different research questions, and that many areas of contemporary debate regarding the nature of working memory reflect differences that are mor ...
... attention…. I argue that the multiple-component perspective and the singleattentional-system perspective are complementary, with each best suited to asking different research questions, and that many areas of contemporary debate regarding the nature of working memory reflect differences that are mor ...
Introduction to Psychology
... Measure of memory in which the person has only to identify items previously learned as on a multiple-choice test ...
... Measure of memory in which the person has only to identify items previously learned as on a multiple-choice test ...
Working Memory
... Cognitive functions are spared, but Ability to encode and retrieve new experiences are lost. ...
... Cognitive functions are spared, but Ability to encode and retrieve new experiences are lost. ...
Functional Framework for Cognition
... Cognitive functions are spared, but Ability to encode and retrieve new experiences are lost. ...
... Cognitive functions are spared, but Ability to encode and retrieve new experiences are lost. ...
Functional Framework for Cognition
... Parts of system work with others, but can also compete. The output components are under frontal control and are related to voluntary motor functions, control of skeletal muscles and mental functions. ...
... Parts of system work with others, but can also compete. The output components are under frontal control and are related to voluntary motor functions, control of skeletal muscles and mental functions. ...
Learning & Memory
... an elephant is a living rather than a nonliving thing that it is an animal rather than a plant that it lives in a particular environment that it has unique physical features and behavior patterns emits a distinctive set of sounds. that elephants are used by humans to perform certain tasks that they ...
... an elephant is a living rather than a nonliving thing that it is an animal rather than a plant that it lives in a particular environment that it has unique physical features and behavior patterns emits a distinctive set of sounds. that elephants are used by humans to perform certain tasks that they ...
The Physiology of Memory Craig E. Geis, MBA, Management
... to be completely done to be done at all and so requires a higher degree of organization and competency which involves over learning. ...
... to be completely done to be done at all and so requires a higher degree of organization and competency which involves over learning. ...
Document
... memory they are reasonably permanent, and not easily forgotten. Even if the information is seemingly lost, a long-term memory can usually be recalled with a few hints. Interestingly, memories can be modified by our perceptions, beliefs, or through suggestions made by others about a specific situatio ...
... memory they are reasonably permanent, and not easily forgotten. Even if the information is seemingly lost, a long-term memory can usually be recalled with a few hints. Interestingly, memories can be modified by our perceptions, beliefs, or through suggestions made by others about a specific situatio ...
Thrills That Kill
... The Location of Memory In the past, it was thought that all memory was in the brain. However, Gazzaniga (1988) reports that memory occurs throughout the nervous system. So every thought you have is “felt” throughout your entire body because the receptors for the chemicals in your brain are found on ...
... The Location of Memory In the past, it was thought that all memory was in the brain. However, Gazzaniga (1988) reports that memory occurs throughout the nervous system. So every thought you have is “felt” throughout your entire body because the receptors for the chemicals in your brain are found on ...
Lec 18 - Forgetting
... "memory trace" is formed in the brain and over time this trace tends to disintegrate, unless it is occasionally used. Definitions and Controversy Forgetting can have very different causes than simply removal of stored content. Forgetting can mean access problems, availability problems, or can have o ...
... "memory trace" is formed in the brain and over time this trace tends to disintegrate, unless it is occasionally used. Definitions and Controversy Forgetting can have very different causes than simply removal of stored content. Forgetting can mean access problems, availability problems, or can have o ...
Chapter 16 - Psychological Disorders Lesson 3 Quiz
... 3. JoAnn interprets every minor ache, pain, or bump as a sign of a serious illness. She is suffering from a conversion disorder. a. True b. False 4. Martin cannot remember where he lives, what he does for a living, or his own children’s names. He likely is suffering from dissociative amnesia. a. Tru ...
... 3. JoAnn interprets every minor ache, pain, or bump as a sign of a serious illness. She is suffering from a conversion disorder. a. True b. False 4. Martin cannot remember where he lives, what he does for a living, or his own children’s names. He likely is suffering from dissociative amnesia. a. Tru ...
Emotions and Memory - Stanford Law School
... “There should also be more interest in what people actually do (eat, have political views, watch television…), [and] more concern about whether the paradigmatic instances we choose for experimental analysis correspond to real-world events and are both robust and generalizable” Rozin, Perspectives Ps ...
... “There should also be more interest in what people actually do (eat, have political views, watch television…), [and] more concern about whether the paradigmatic instances we choose for experimental analysis correspond to real-world events and are both robust and generalizable” Rozin, Perspectives Ps ...
Storing and Keeping Memories
... the human brain which has about 100,000 billion neurons and 100 trillion synapses. How Alzheimer’s and other dementias destroy short- and long-term memory has been the subject of heated controversy in recent years. It may be assumed that hippocampal damage and death of neurons from the neurodegenera ...
... the human brain which has about 100,000 billion neurons and 100 trillion synapses. How Alzheimer’s and other dementias destroy short- and long-term memory has been the subject of heated controversy in recent years. It may be assumed that hippocampal damage and death of neurons from the neurodegenera ...
1 Bi/CNS/NB 150 Problem Set 5 Due: Tuesday, Nov. 24, at 4:30 pm
... 2.B.b. What are the differences among iconic memory, short-term memory, working memory, and long-term memory? Include the time scales over which each of these different forms of memory are active and the region(s) of the nervous system responsible for them in humans. Iconic memory (< 1 s) is short- ...
... 2.B.b. What are the differences among iconic memory, short-term memory, working memory, and long-term memory? Include the time scales over which each of these different forms of memory are active and the region(s) of the nervous system responsible for them in humans. Iconic memory (< 1 s) is short- ...