Meyers Chapter 6 Hangman

 
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Memory  the mental capacity or faculty of retaining and reviving facts, events, impressions, etc., or of recalling or recognizing previous experiences.  
Flashbulb memory  A flashbulb memory is a memory laid down in great detail during a personally significant event, often a shocking event of national or international importance. These memories are perceived to have a "photographic" quality  
Encode  to convert a message or information into code  
Store  to accumulate or put away, for future use  
Retrieve  to recover something from memory  
Sensory memory  ability to retain impressions of sensory information after the original stimulus has ceased. It refers to items detected by the sensory receptors which are retained temporarily in the sensory registers and which have a large capacity for unprocessed info.  
Short-term memory  sometimes referred to as "primary," "working," or "active" memory, is that part of memory which stores a limited amount of information for a few seconds  
Long-term memory  is memory, stored as meaning, that can last as little as 30 seconds or as long as decades. It differs structurally and functionally from working memory or short-term memory, which ostensibly stores items for only around 30 seconds.  
eposodic memory  memory for specific events in time  
semantic memory  refers to knowledge about the external world, such as the function of a pencil  
Proceedual memory  refers to the use of objects or movements of the body, such as how exactly to use a pencil or ride a bicycle. This type of memory is encoded and probably stored by the cerebellum and the striatum.  
rehearsal  the act of repeating or relating something so it will not be lost in memory.  
Hermann Ebbinghaus  German psychologist who pioneered experimental study of memory, and discovered the forgetting curve and the learning curve.  
spacing effect  way of memorizing by spacing information accordingly instead of trying to cram it in quickly.  
chunking  the configuration of smaller units of information into large coordinated units  
automatic processing  doing things you don't have to think about, that come naturally like walking.  
Effortful processing  recalling information after a long break  
Serial position effect  tendency to remember things that happened first and last but forget things in the middle  
Recentcy effect  tendency to remember the most recent things that happened  
Primacy effect  tendency to remember the first things that took place and forget the information in the middle.  
acoustic encoding  learning by hearing information  
visual encoding  attaching meaning from a visual item  
semantic encoding  knowing the definition of words  
ionic memory  remembering visual stimuli  
echodic memory  remembering auditory stimuli  
implict memory  retention of independant concious recollection  
priming  activating parts of particular representations or associations in memory just before carrying out an action or task  
Attention  the selection of some incoming information for further pr.ocessing  
Rote rehearsal  retaining information in memory simply by repeating it over and over.  
Automaticity  through rote rehearsal repetive memorization that becomes memory to perform a task flawlessly.  
Elaborative rehearsal  the linking of new information in short term memory to familiar memories stored in long term memory.  
Schema (schemata)  A set of beliefs or expectations about something that is based on past expirences or long-term memory.  
Declarative memory  episodic or semantic merories that we can put into words.  
Emotional memory  learned emotional responses to various stimuli.  
Decay theory  theory that argues that the passage of time causes forgetting.  
Korsakoff's syndrom  chrongic alcoholism that leads to amnesia caused by a vitamen deficentency in a poor diet.  
retrograde amnesia  the inabiltiy to recall events preceeding an accident or injury by without loss of earlie memory.  
proactive interference  the proccess by which new information interferes with information already in memory studied by paired-associcate learning.  
cue-dependant forgetting  when enviormental cues that were present during learning but absent during recall the effect to remember is less successful.  
state-dependant memory  infulenced by enviormemntal cues, our ability to accuratly recall information is effected by internal cues.  
Mnemonics  techniques used to make material easier to remember.  
Autobiographical memories  form an episodic memory refers to recollection of events that have taken place in one's life.  
Temproal landmarks  special reference points in one's life that play an important role in organizing autographical memories.  
Event clusters theory  material and events that are causally related or similar in content are embedded into a common event cluster.  
Childhood amnesia  the difficulty adults have remembering expirences from their first two years of life.  
recovered memories  a person forgets something then remembers usually under hypnosis or psychotherapy.