Psychology memory test

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What does the term context mean in psychology?

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Psychology

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59 Terms

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What does the term context mean in psychology?

Environment

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2

Memories that can best be recalled when in the same context the memory was formed

What is a context dependent memory?

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3

Memories with a strong emotional connection

What is a state dependent memory?

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4

Encoding, Storage and Retrieval

What are the 3 basic memory processes processes?

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5

Sensory memory, short-term memory and long-term memory

Name the three main memory stores?

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6
  • Memories are what make up a person’s life experiences,

  • It was keeps us connected with past and present events

  • allows us to interconnect those moments with the future.

What is memory?

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7

Associating a memory with something meaningful to help remember it better

Describe the process of encoding?

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8

Putting away information in our brain in order to retrieve it when needed

Describe the process of storage?

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9

Locating and recovering the information stored in the brain

Describe the process of memory retrieval?

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10
  • Sensory memory is the first stage of receiving a memory, when it receives many different and detailed senses.

  • Do not last for long, causing it to essentially a snapshot of the memory.

  • It is up to the brain to decide which details to give attention to, in order for it to be encoded and stored away.

  • Sensory memory details that aren’t given any attention are lost.

Describe sensory memory including the type of memory, duration and capacity in out brain?

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11

Known as the ‘working memory’, it refers to al the memories that the brain is currently conscious of holding.

Describe short term memory including the type of memory, duration and capacity in out brain?

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12

Long term memories are memories that have been given attention to by the brain and stored away in our unconscious mind

Describe long term memory including the type of memory, duration and capacity in out brain?

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13

Re-call, Recognition, Relearning

What the three ways memory is accessed in memory retreival?

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14

remembering something without any cues to the piece of information in the brains memory

Describe re-call?

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15

can remember something when pieces of information and your brain is able to recognize something.

Describe recognition?

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16

visiting something you already knew, but need to brush up on in order to remember it clearly.

Describe relearning?

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17

Things that are remembered at the start of something and will be moved to LTM

What is the primacy effect?

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18

Things that are remember at the end of something and will be moved to STM

Describe what the recency effect is?

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19

Where the LTM organized memories into groups of concepts known as nodes, which are all interconnected to each other

What does the term systematic networks mean in psychology?

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20

Chunking, maintenance rehearsal and Elaboration rehearsal

Identify what the 3 methods for holding information in the STM are?

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21

A method to help retain memory longer by grouping pieces of information together

What is chunking?

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22

Repeating information to yourself over and over again

What is maintenance rehearsal?

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23

Adding meaning to information to add connections to information and retain it better

What is elaboration rehearsal?

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24

The concept of most likely remembering the list of thing said at the start and end, but not in the middle

Describe the concept of serial positioning?

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25

Part of the limbic system and located in the temporal lobe and functions for memory

What is the hippocampus?

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26

When we go into a room to do something, but as soon as we enter the room, we forget what we were meant to do

What is the portal effect?

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27

Iconic memory, Haptic memory and echoic memory

Identify the 3 main ways the sensory memory obtains information?

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28

The visual aspect of the memory, allowing the brain to retain an image

What is iconic memory?

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The brief memory of touch

What is haptic memory?

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30

The brief memory of auditory information

What is echoic memory?

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31

The brain paying attention to particular details from the sensory memory in order for it to be stored and moved into either the STM or LTM

The term ‘attention’ in this topic describes what?

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32

Procedural memory and declarative memory

What are the two types of long term memory?

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33

Sematic and Episodic memory

What are the subsection of declarative memory?

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34

Declarative memory is this that we say out loud. Within that, are subsections, sematic (numbers, figures, disconnected facts) and the episodic memories (stories, connected facts and information, describing a sequence).

What is declarative memory?

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35

There is procedural memory (motor memory), which are dependent on the cerebral, basal ganglia and is the ‘how to’ memory’

What is procedural memory?

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Sematic memories is essentially general knowledge of information, facts, numbers, disconnected facts, ideas that have nothing to do with you, personally

What is sematic memory?

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Episodic memories are memories relating personally of you and your life experiences. They are stories, events, connected facts, emotions, and have context

What is episodic memory?

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38

Procedural memory

What is the ‘knowing how’ memory called?

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Declarative memory

What is the ‘knowing that’ memory called?

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40

A flash ball memory are memories that have been connected to fierce emotional feelings of the past and the events and allow people to remember that memory vividly.

What are flash bulb memories?

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The amygdala is used because it functions to regulate a persons emotions

What brain structure is used in flash bulb memories and why?

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42

What is the number of capacity which information can be stored in the STM?

About 7 pieces of information (numbers) can be stored in the STM

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43

What is schema?

Memory can work by association when the brain tries to fit information into the context it thinks it belongs into and connect it with something it already knows. This ‘scripted thinking’ is called schema.

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44

What are the 3 psychological effects from schema?

Omission of unfamiliar details, familiarity of things strange, rationalism of illogical things

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45

What of the name of the German psychologist that contributed to the field of forgetting? What did be contribute?

Hermann Ebbinghaus found that memory can be forgotten within the first hour of having it formed.

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46

What was Fredrick Bartlett’s experiment and what were the result?

Students reading a native Indian story and asked to recall what happened a few weeks after it was first read. It was found that memories stored in the LTM are always adapted and updated when they are recalled again.

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47

What are false memories?

Memories that are inaccurate to what actually happened, but we believe them to be accurate.

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48

What is retroactive bias?

refers to applying current beliefs and values to past memories

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49

What is suggestibility?

Suggestibility is putting misinformation into the brain through leading  questions, deception or others

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50

What is misattribution?

Misattribution refers a cognitive bias in which a person can remember an piece of information , but cannot remember where or when they learnt it.

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51

This theory refers to when people become unconscious as a result of being knocked out, they often state that they cannot recall memories from prior to the event (retrograde amnesia) as far as 30 minutes prior. This means that memories need consolidation time when it is moved to LTM so that it is stored properly.

The consolidation theory

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52

Motivated forgetting

Suppression is the act of deliberately trying to forget and distance yourself away from a memory of an event whilst repression is the act of unconsciously blocking memory as a result of the Freudian defence mechanism. These types of memories are not lost, but they are very hard to retrieve, and can unconsciously affect a person’s behaviour and personality in numerous negative ways.

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Encoding failure

Never actually encoding information into our brain, so it was never moved to either STM or LTM. This could be as a result of lack of attention, fatigue, drugs/alcohol

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54

when memory traces are chemically or physically stored into the brain, and is created when information is transferred from the STM to the LTM. When information is accessed often, the traces strengthen, but when it is not accessed over a long period of time, the trace can weaken.

natural decay

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55

failure to retrieve info

when there is a poor fit between the retrieval processing and type of retrieval processing used when coding. For instance, using auditory retrieval cues is not effective when you encoding auditory into your brain.

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retroactive interference

retroactive interference refers to when new information interferes with the retention of  old information (Backwards effect).

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proactive interference

Proactive interference refers to previously learnt information interfering with newly learnt information (forwards effect).

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58

Organic amnesia

could be a result of a traumatic brain injury, chemical imbalances, stroke or alcoholism. It can be partial or complete memory loss and temporary or permanent.

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59

Hysterical amnesia

when memory is forgotten as a result of intense emotions, such as stress or trauma

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