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Back to Board Welcome to Jeopardy!. Back to Board Today’s Categories~ ~ Stages and Types of Memory ~ How we Encode ~ What we Encode ~ Retaining & Storing.

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Presentation on theme: "Back to Board Welcome to Jeopardy!. Back to Board Today’s Categories~ ~ Stages and Types of Memory ~ How we Encode ~ What we Encode ~ Retaining & Storing."— Presentation transcript:

1 Back to Board Welcome to Jeopardy!

2 Back to Board Today’s Categories~ ~ Stages and Types of Memory ~ How we Encode ~ What we Encode ~ Retaining & Storing Information ~ Retrieval & Forgetting

3 Back to Board Stages & Types of Memory HOW we Encode WHAT we Encode Retaining & Storing Information Retrieval & Forgetting 10 20 30 40 50 100

4 Back to Board Process of getting information out of memory storage. What is Retrieval? Stages and Types of Memory: 10-

5 Back to Board Immediate, brief recording of sensory information into the memory. What is Sensory Memory? Stages and Types of Memory : 20-

6 Back to Board The processing of getting information into our brain. What is Encoding? Stages and Types of Memory : 30-

7 Back to Board Activated memory that holds a few items briefly; rehearsal is necessary for encoding. What is Short-term Memory? Stages and Types of Memory : 40-

8 Back to Board A newer understanding of short- term memory; focuses on active processing of information. What is Working Memory? Stages and Types of Memory : 50-

9 Back to Board What is Long-term Memory? Stages and Types of Memory : 100- Relatively permanent and limitless storehouse of the memory system.

10 Back to Board Encoding that requires attention, time, conscious effort. What is Effortful Processing? How we Encode: 10-

11 Back to Board What is Rehearsal? Conscious repetition of information, to encode it for storage. How we Encode: 20-

12 Back to Board Brains natural mode of information processing; simultaneously. What is Parallel Processing? How we Encode: 30-

13 Back to Board Tendency for distributed study to yield better long-term retention (no cramming). What is Spacing Effect? How we Encode: 40-

14 Back to Board Tendency to recall the first and last items in a list the best. What is the Serial Position Effect? How we Encode: 50-

15 Back to Board German philosopher; early memory studies with nonsense syllables. How we Encode: 100- Who is Hermann Ebbinghaus?

16 Back to Board Encoding information due to hearing words, making sounds, songs, poems, rhymes. What is Acoustic Encoding? What we Encode: 10-

17 Back to Board Encoding by organizing items into familiar, manageable units. What is Chunking? What we Encode: 20-

18 Back to Board Encoding by adding meaning to the words; most important ingredient used for memory. What is Semantic Encoding? What we Encode: 30-

19 Back to Board Encoding by thinking of picture IMAGES; ex: grocery list and walking through the house. What is Visual Encoding? What we Encode: 40-

20 Back to Board Encoding by putting information into broad concepts divided and subdivided into narrower concepts. What are Hierarchies? What we Encode: 50-

21 Back to Board Broad organizational devices/memory aids; include vivid imagery and peg-word systems. What are Mnemonics? What we Encode: 100-

22 Back to Board A momentary sensory memory of AUDITORY stimuli; recall within 3-4 seconds. What is Echoic Memory? Retaining & Storing Information : 10-

23 Back to Board An increase in a synapse's firing potential after a brief, rapid stimulation. What is LTP or Long-term Potentiation ? Retaining & Storing Information : 20-

24 Back to Board A very clear and vivid memory of an emotionally significant moment. What is a Flashbulb Memory ? Retaining & Storing Information : 30-

25 Back to Board Sensory memory of visual stimuli; a photographic memory. What is Iconic Memory? Retaining & Storing Information : 40-

26 Back to Board Area in the brain where EXPLICIT memories are stored. What is the Hippocampus ? Retaining & Storing Information : 50-

27 Back to Board Type of memory that stores motor skills; ex: Riding a bike. What is Implicit memory ? Retaining & Storing Information: 100-

28 Back to Board Tendency to recall experiences that are consistent with one’s current mood. What is Mood Congruent Memory? Retrieval & Forgetting: 10-

29 Back to Board In the Psychoanalytic theory, the basic defense mechanism that supports “motivated forgetting”. What is Repression? Retrieval & Forgetting: 20-

30 Back to Board Lingering effects of misinformation; skews perception of what happened in a situation; sin of distortion. What is Suggestibility? Retrieval & Forgetting: 30-

31 Back to Board Context cues from a current situation seem familiar and may trigger retrieval of an earlier experience. What is Déjà vu? Retrieval & Forgetting: 40-

32 Back to Board Retrieval & Forgetting: 50- Unable to retrieve-recall old information due to new learning that may be similar. What is Retroactive Interference?

33 Back to Board Storage decay over time which contributes to forgetting; one of the 7 sins. What is Transience? Retrieval & Forgetting: 100-

34 Back to Board The End


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