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Chapter 9 Memory.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 9 Memory."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 9 Memory

2 Memory Active system that receives, stores, organizes, alters, and recovers information Incoming information is encoded (changed to a usable form) Then stored (held in the system) Later retrieved (taken out of storage)

3 Sensory Memory Can hold exact copy of what was seen or heard for only a few seconds, long enough to transfer to STM Icon: mental image

4 Short-Term Memory (STM)
Holds small amount of information for brief periods Selective attention: focus on selected portion of sensory input; controls what gets into STM Cam be sorted as images, but mostly phonetic (words) Working memory: briefly holds information while other mental activities take place Sensitive to interference or interruption

5 STM Storage Capacity: 7 plus or minus 2
Information chunks: bits of information grouped into larger units Records or reorganizes information into categories already in LTM Maintenance rehearsal (silently repeating) prolongs memory Elaborative rehearsal makes information more meaningful

6 Long-Term Memory (LTM)
Stores important or meaningful information Limitless, permanent Stored by meaning Memories affected by emotions, judgment Information may be arranged by rules, images, categories, symbols, personal meaning

7 LTM Procedural memory: skill memory Declarative memory: fact memory
Semantic Memory: personal knowledge about the world (days of the week, names of objects) Episodic memory: personal information linked with specific times and dates; more easily forgotten than semantic memory

8 Retrieval of information
Whether you remember depends on how you’re tested Recognition: correctly identify previously learned information Very accurate for visual stimuli, pictures Superior to recall Recall: direct retrieval of information Serial position effect: make more errors in remembering the middle items in a series

9 Forgetting Most forgetting occurs right after memorization
Semantic and implicit (outside of awareness, such as a keyboard) memories last longer Encoding failure: memory was never formed Decay: memory traces weaken over time

10 Memory Strategies Feedback Recitation: summarize in own words
Rehearsal: review Selection organization: chunks Spaced practice: superior to massed practice

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