6.1-6.3 Flashcards

1
Q

an active system that acquires information from different senses, turns the information into a usable form, puts it in order as it is stored away, and then retrieves the information from storage.

A

Memory

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2
Q

Acquiring sensory information (sight, sound, etc.) into a form that the brain can use.

A

Encoding

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3
Q

Holding on to the information for some period of time (which may differ in length)

A

Storage

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4
Q

Getting the information they know they have out of storage.

A

Retrieval

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5
Q

most influential over the last several decades
focuses on the way information is handled, or processed, through three different systems of memory: encoding, storage, and retrieval.

A

Information-processing model

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6
Q

sees memory as a simultaneous process, with the creation and storage of memories taking place across a series of mental networks “stretched” across the brain
Memory processes are proposed to take place at the same time

A

Parallel distributed processing (PDP) model.

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7
Q

Assumes that information that is more “thoroughly processed,” according to its meaning rather than just the sound or physical characteristics of the item, will be remembered more efficiently and for a longer period of time.

A

Levels-of-processing model

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8
Q

the first system in the process of memory, the point at which information enters the nervous system through the sensory systems—eyes, ears, etc.

A

Sensory memory

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9
Q

There are two kinds of sensory memory:

A

Iconic (Visual) Sensory Systems
Echoic (Auditory) Sensory Systems

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10
Q

When a person looks at something or someone and looks back again because of a memory or thought.

A

Double Take

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11
Q

It is a visual sensory memory, lasting only a fraction of a second.

A

Iconic (Visual) Sensory System

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12
Q

In Greek, Icon means

A

Image

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13
Q

a process where information that has just entered iconic memory will be pushed out very quickly by new information (Cowan, 1988).

A

Masking

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14
Q

the ability to access a visual memory for 30 seconds or more.

A

Eidetic Imagery

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15
Q

people who have extremely good memory have photographic memory.

A

Photographic Memory

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16
Q

It is the brief memory of something a person has heard.

A

Echoic (Auditory) Sensory Memory

17
Q

Duration of Echoic Sensory Memory

A

2-4 seconds (Schweickert, 1993)