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Page 1: Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Taking In and Storing InformationTaking In and Storing Information Section 2:Retrieving InformationRetrieving
Page 2: Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Taking In and Storing InformationTaking In and Storing Information Section 2:Retrieving InformationRetrieving

Chapter Menu

Chapter Introduction

Section 1: Taking In and Storing Information

Section 2:Retrieving Information

Page 3: Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Taking In and Storing InformationTaking In and Storing Information Section 2:Retrieving InformationRetrieving

Chapter Preview 1

Chapter Objectives · Section 1

Taking In and Storing Information

Describe the three processes involved in memory: encoding, storage, and retrieval.

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Chapter Preview 2

Chapter Objectives · Section 2

The Senses

Understand that stored memory can be retrieved by recognition, recall, and relearning.

Page 5: Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Taking In and Storing InformationTaking In and Storing Information Section 2:Retrieving InformationRetrieving

Chapter Preview-End

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Section 1-Main Idea

Main Idea

There are three processes involved in memory: encoding, storage, and retrieval.

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Section 1-Key Terms

Vocabulary

• memory

• encoding

• storage

• retrieval

• sensory memory

• short-term memory

• maintenance rehearsal

• chunking

• semantic memory

• episodic memory

• declarative memory

• procedural memory

Page 8: Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Taking In and Storing InformationTaking In and Storing Information Section 2:Retrieving InformationRetrieving

Section 1-Objectives

Objectives

• Explain the three processes of memory.

• Describe the information-processing model of memory.

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A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 1-Polling Question

A B C D

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How many windows were in your first bedroom?

A. None

B. One

C. Two

D. Three or more

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Section 1

The Processes of Memory

• Memory is the input, storage, and retrieval of what has been learned or experienced.

• Three steps:

– Encoding

– Storage

– Retrieval

The Processes of Memory

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A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 1

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

If you’re studying for a vocabulary test and you create a sentence in order to remember the word, which type of code are you using?

A. Visual

B. Semantic

C. Acoustic

D. All of the above

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Section 1

Three Stages of Memory

• The three types of memory:

– Sensory memory

• prevents you from being overwhelmed

• gives you some decision time

• allows for continuity and stability in your world

Stages of Memory

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Section 1

Three Stages of Memory (cont.)

– Short-term memory

• Maintenance rehearsal

• Chunking

– Long-term memory

Spot the Real PennyUsing Short-Term Memory

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Section 1

• Four types of long-term memory:

– Semantic memory

– Episodic memory

– Declarative memory

– Procedural memory

Three Stages of Memory (cont.)

Three Systems of Memory

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A. A

B. B

C. C

Section 1

A B C

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The ability to repeat the last sentence someone says although you are only half-listening is which type of memory?

A. Sensory

B. Short-term

C. Long-term

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Section 1

Memory and the Brain

• Two theories regarding the physiological changes that occur when we learn something:

– A change in the neuronal structure of nerves occurs.

– Learning is based on molecular or chemical changes in the brain.

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Section 1

Memory and the Brain (cont.)

• Procedural memory involves activity in an area of the brain called the striatum.

• Declarative memories result from activity in the hippocampus and the amygdala.

Memory Centers in the Brain

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A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 1

A B C D

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Which part of the brain is responsible for emotional associations?

A. The Amygdala

B. The Cortex

C. The Thalamus

D. The Hippocampus

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Section 1-End

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Section 2-Main Idea

Main Idea

Stored memory can be retrieved by recognition, recall, and relearning.

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Section 2-Key Terms

Vocabulary

• recognition

• recall

• reconstructive processes

• confabulation

• schemas

• eidetic memory

• decay

• interference

• elaborative rehearsal

• mnemonic devices

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Section 2-Objectives

Objectives

• Identify several memory retrieval processes.

• Explain the processes involved in forgetting.

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A. A

B. B

Section 2-Polling Question

A B

0%0%

Do you remember the name of your first-grade teacher?

A. Yes

B. No

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Section 2

Recognition

• Recognition

• A single item of information may be indexed under several headings so that it can be reached in many ways.

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A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 2

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

With the content being the same, which type of test do you feel is easier?

A. Multiple Choice

B. Short Answer

C. Essay

D. Verbal

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Section 2

Recall

• Recall involves a person’s knowledge, attitudes, and expectations.

• Recall is influenced by reconstructive processes.

• Adding addition information not in memory is called confabulation.

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Section 2

Recall (cont.)

• Our memories may be reconstructed in terms of schemas

• Eidetic memory

• State-dependent learning occurs when you recall information easily when you are in the same physiological or emotional state or setting you were when you originally encoded the information.

Elizabeth Loftus

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A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 2

A B C D

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Filling in “gaps” in a story would be an example of what?

A. Schemas

B. Eidetic memory

C. Recall

D. Confabulation

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Section 2

Relearning

• Relearning is a measure of both declarative and procedural memory.

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A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 2

A B C D

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Have you ever tried to relearn something and found it easier the second time around?

A. Yes

B. No

C. Sometimes

D. Not sure

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Section 2

Forgetting

• When information that once entered long-term memory is unable to be retrieved, it is said to be forgotten.

• Forgetting may involve:

– Decay

– Interference

– Repression

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Section 2

Forgetting (cont.)

• Two kinds of blockage:

– Proactive

– Retroactive

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Section 2

Forgetting (cont.)

• Amnesia—a loss of memory that may occur after a blow to the head, brain damage, drug use, or severe psychological stress.

• Infant amnesia—the relative lack of early declarative memories.

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Section 2

Forgetting (cont.)

• Theories for why we do not remember being young:

– Freud thought that memories are repressed because of the emotional traumas of infancy.

– Others believe that because infants do not yet understand language, their memories are nonverbal, whereas later memories are verbal.

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Section 2

Forgetting (cont.)

– Others claim that the hippocampus may not be mature enough in infancy to spark memories.

– Or that infants have not yet developed a sense of self to experience memories.

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A. A

B. B

C. C

D. D

Section 2

A B C D

0% 0%0%0%

Which of the following is more likely after an accident?

A. Decay

B. Interference

C. Repression

D. Amnesia

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Section 2

Improving Memory

• Techniques for improving memory are based on efficient organization of the things you learn and on chunking information into easily handled packages.

• Elaborative rehearsal

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Section 2

Improving Memory (cont.)

• Ways to protect a memory from interference:

– Overlearn it.

– Avoid studying similar material together.

– Use distributed practice, or study a little at a time.

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Section 2

• Mnemonic devices

• Examples:

Improving Memory (cont.)

– The Method of Loci

– “Thirty days has September”

– “Every Good Boy Does Fine”

– Mental pictures

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A. A

B. B

C. C

Section 2

A B C

0% 0%0%

Of the following, which do you find more effective in remembering information for a test?

A. Elaborative rehearsal

B. Distributed practice

C. Mnemonic devices

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Section 2-End

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Figure 1

Stages of MemoryPsychologists often compare human memory to a computer; however, unlike a computer, people can never fill their long-term memories so full that there is no room left for storage.

Page 43: Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Taking In and Storing InformationTaking In and Storing Information Section 2:Retrieving InformationRetrieving

Figure 2

Spot the Real PennyWhich is the genuine penny among the fakes? Even though you live in the United States and probably see hundreds of pennies a week, it is difficult to identify the real one. Mere reception, such as seeing something over and over again, does not guarantee a strong memory.

Page 44: Chapter Menu Chapter Introduction Section 1: Taking In and Storing InformationTaking In and Storing Information Section 2:Retrieving InformationRetrieving

Figure 3

Using Short-Term MemoryGlance quickly at the left figure in this pair, then look away. How many dots did you see? Now do the same with the right figure. You were probably surer and more accurate in your answer for the right figure.

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Figure 4

Three Systems of MemoryThe moment you pay attention to information in sensory memory, that information enters short-term memory. Then that information remains in short-term memory for a few seconds. If you rehearse that information, it stays; if you do not, it disappears.

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Figure 5

Memory Centers in the BrainResearchers have identified the parts of the brain that are involved in memory.

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Figure 7

The Processes of Memory

Memory involves three processes.

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Profile

Elizabeth Loftus1944–

“One of the things that we know about memory

for very upsetting experiences, traumatic experiences, is that the memory does not work

like a videotape recorder.”

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Concept Trans Menu

Chapter Concepts Transparencies

Chunking

Select a transparency to view.

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Concept Trans 1

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DFS Trans 1

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DFS Trans 2

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Vocab1

memory: the input, storage, and retrieval of what has been learned or experienced

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Vocab2

encoding: the transforming of information so the nervous system can process it

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Vocab3

storage: the process by which information is maintained over a period of time

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Vocab4

retrieval: the process of obtaining information that has been stored in memory

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Vocab5

sensory memory: very brief memory storage immediately following initial stimulation of a receptor

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Vocab6

short-term memory: memory that is limited in capacity to about seven items and in duration by the subject’s active rehearsal

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Vocab7

maintenance rehearsal: a system for remembering that involves repeating information to one-self without attempting to find meaning in it

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Vocab8

chunking: the process of grouping items to make them easier to remember

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Vocab9

semantic memory: knowledge of language, including its rules, words, and meanings

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Vocab10

episodic memory: chronological retention of the events of one’s life

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Vocab11

declarative memory: stored knowledge of learned skills that does not require conscious recollection

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Vocab12

procedural memory: permanent storage of learned skills that does not require conscious recollection

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Vocab13

recognition: memory retrieval in which a person identifies an object, idea, or situation as one he or she has or has not experienced before

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Vocab14

recall: memory retrieval in which a person reconstructs previously learned material

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Vocab15

reconstructive processes: the alteration of a recalled memory that may be simplified, enriched, or distorted, depending on an individual’s experiences, attitudes, or inferences

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Vocab16

confabulation: the act of filling in memory gaps

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Vocab17

schemas: conceptual frameworks a person uses to make sense of the world

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Vocab18

eidetic memory: the ability to remember with great accuracy visual information on the basis of short-term exposure

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Vocab19

decay: fading away of memory over time

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Vocab20

interference: blockage of a memory by previous or subsequent memories or loss of a retrieval cue

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Vocab21

elaborative rehearsal: the linking of new information to material that is already known

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Vocab22

mnemonic devices: techniques for using associations to memorize and retrieve information

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