Terry 7 Flashcards

1
Q

short term memory

A

where information goes first, stays when we reintroduce it or rehearse it; used in exposure, rehearsal, and pulling LTM info out. very brief duration, limited capacity, conscious memory

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2
Q

primacy effect

A

remember items at the beginning better (LTM) (happens more when you learn at a slower pace, less if it’s at a faster rate)

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3
Q

serial position curve

A

obtained in free recall tasks- how an item’s position in a list of item affects how well it’s recalled (usually looks like a U)

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4
Q

long term memory

A

if it stays in short term memory long enough it’s transferred; storage location, can be pulled back to short term memory through retrieval. once info is here it’s there permanently; subconscious memory; infinite capacity

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5
Q

recency effect

A

remember items at the end better (STM)

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6
Q

episodic memory

A

declarative; events/stories (when/where?)

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7
Q

semantic memory

A

declarative; the meaning (who/what?)

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8
Q

word frequency effect

A

when given a list of words and asked to identify them later, subjects are more likely to identify low-frequency because they can attribute them to this situation, whereas high frequency they see so often that they can’t be sure whether they saw it here or somewhere else

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9
Q

explicit memory

A

actively trying to learn it; can verbalize

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10
Q

implicit memory

A

you’re unaware of acquiring this memory; can’t verbalize, but can demonstrate

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11
Q

procedural learning

A

knowledge of how to do things (perceptual, motor, cognitive skills); knowing how (rather than knowing THAT)

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12
Q

priming

A

identification of one stimulus is facilitated by prior exposure to that stimulus

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13
Q

depth of processing theory

A

the more effort you put into learning the material, the more likely you are to understand the info later (shallow vs deep rather than different modes)

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14
Q

maintenance rehearsal

A

repeat something over and over again to keep it fresh in short term memory so you can use it, then it fades after you use it (ex: phone number)

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15
Q

elaborative rehearsal

A

deeper processing/understanding of material in order to remember it longer

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16
Q

incidental learning

A

not on purpose learning

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17
Q

transfer-appropriate processing

A

thinking about something in the most applicable way (ex: in terms of math vs in terms of history- you gain speed when you’re thinking on the same topic) cognitive

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18
Q

delta rule

A

every experience changes the amount of strength with which synapses are connected until they reach a maximum amount of strength

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19
Q

psychogenic amnesia

A

amnesia coming from psychological trauma

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20
Q

retrograde amnesia

A

can’t remember memories that were created in the past

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21
Q

anterograde amnesia

A

can’t create new memories

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22
Q

amnesic syndrome

A

can’t form new long term memories but have a reasonable short term memory; trouble forming semantic/episodic, but can do procedural

23
Q

korsakoff’s syndrome

A

show retrograde and anterograde amnesia; people who consume high amounts of alcohol and don’t get all their vitamins, a part of the brain is degenerated and it’s associated with memories

24
Q

dual store theory

A

we have 2 kinds of memory: short term and long term

25
Q

Atkinson-Shiffrin modal model of memory

A

info goes into short term memory then long term memory

26
Q

HM

A

evidence that STM and LTM exist; part of his brain was removed bc he was having seizures, and he lost the ability to create LTM; can learn procedural without remembering the actual task

27
Q

KF

A

can’t form STM but can form LTM (implies that info can bypass STM- info may go both into STM and LTM)

28
Q

electroconvulsive shock

A

therapeutic technique for severe depressions that can’t be helped by chemicals; disrupts moving of most recent info from short term to long term memory

29
Q

intractable depression

A

drugs don’t help

30
Q

consolidation

A

moving memory from STM to LTM

31
Q

retrieval failure

A

it’s in LTM but you can’t pull it out

32
Q

reminder cues

A

present a cue and the memory will reappear- it’s not permanently lost

33
Q

von Restorf effect

A

list of all the same items but one in the middle is in all caps; that change is enough to cause retrograde amnesia for the items before

34
Q

serial processing model

A

you have to go in the order of STM to LTM

35
Q

declarative memories

A

verbal- you acquired it verbally and can repeat it verbally

36
Q

non-declarative memories

A

implicit memories- you learned it but you can’t verbalize (ex: procedural, motor skills)

37
Q

amnestic

A

without memories

38
Q

encoding stage

A

creating

39
Q

storage stage

A

putting in memory

40
Q

retrieval stage

A

getting from memory

41
Q

state dependent learning

A

have people learn while they’re in a certain state (ex: sober, drunk); you learn better if your in a better encoding state. important to be tested under the same state that you learn in, even if it’s drunk

42
Q

encoding specificity principle

A

need same cues available during retrieval as during encoding

43
Q

connectionism

A

the more frequently occurring a couple concepts are together, the more connected those synapses become

44
Q

organic amnesia

A

comes from a physical loss/injury

45
Q

cryptomnesia

A

you have acquired some info but you don’t recognize that it exists in the brain. the idea pops into their head as an original concept and they present it as their own idea- not intentional

46
Q

limited psychogenic amnesia

A

if something aversive happens, you put it out of your mind and you don’t remember even if someone reminds you- if you think hard enough you might (limited to a certain episode)

47
Q

fugue state

A

forgetting one’s entire past life; not sure if this has ever actually happened before

48
Q

altered perspectives

A

describe an event from your point of view and after telling it many times you turn to a less personal point of view

49
Q

dissociative personality disorder

A

people have “multiple” personalities and don’t remember what the other personalities do…but sometimes they do

50
Q

deja vu

A

a situation is eerily familiar; elements of this circumstance are similar to true events you have experienced

51
Q

misidentity disorder- capgras

A

feeling of recognizing that something is missing; see someone you know and it seems like they’re not quite that person

52
Q

source amnesia

A

you know something, but don’t have an episodic trace to identify the where/when of the learning

53
Q

observer memories

A

memories from the perspective of observing yourself (more often in older, emotional memories)