Neuronal activation in regards to learning
Determines how likely and how fast a memory is retrieved
More practice leads to more efficient, specific activation of the target memory, while overall brain activity, particularly in regions associated with a new or difficult task, decreases as a result of increased skill and efficiency
Articulatory process
Part of the phonological loop in Baddeley’s working memory model.
Refer to as the “inner voice”, where verbal info can be rehearsed, by silently repeating it.
Auditory sensory store
A system that can store brief memory for sounds that lasts up to ~10 seconds, allowing us to process sequences like speech.
(also called Echoic memory)
Central executive
The control system in Baddeley’s working memory model:
Allocates attention and coordinates the slave systems.
The slave systems:
- Visuospatial sketchpad
- Phonological loop
Depth of processing
concept from a theory about remembering better
assigning a meaning to a term by thinking about its meaning or connecting it to other things improves our memory of the term and places it from short-term memory into long-term memory
Elaborative processing
When we think of information that relates to or expands on the information that we are trying to remember.
Flashbulb memories
Memory for events so significant that they seem to ‘burn’ themselves permanently into the mind.
Long-term potentiation (LTP)
A form of ‘neural’ learning, which occurs in the hippocampus and in cortical areas. When neurons are repeatedly exposed to stimulus, they increase in responsiveness. As these neurons are activated a lot, they need less input, and are therefore faster at getting activated from other neurons. These connections and the change in responsiveness over time follow the same, but also inverted logarithmic relation as the power of learning.
Memory span
The amount of elements a person can immediately report back, in the right order after hearing a list (which could consist of e.g. numbers or words)
Method of loci
Imagine a specific path through an area you know very well with fixed locations along the path and then associate the terms you are trying to learn/remember to the imagined locations.
e.g. on my route is a blue house and a restaurant, if I were to remember a bottle and a cat I could imagine the blue house as a huge bottle and the restaurant as being served by a cat and later if I were to recall that list I could just walk through my made up path
Partial-report procedure
A condition in Sperling’s (1960) experiment on visual sensory memory (iconic memory)
in which participants are cued to
report only some of the items in a display.
(Contrast with whole-report procedure)
Phonological loop
One of the “slave systems” in Baddeley’s working memory model.
System that temporarily stores and rehearses verbal/auditory information
Consist of:
Phonological store
Part of the phonological loop in Baddeley’s working memory model.
Refered to as the “inner ear” that hears and stores the content of articulary processes in a phonological form.
Power function
A function in which the independent variable X is raised to a power to obtain the dependent variable Y, as in Y = AX^b
b = exponent (the power)
Example: If learning follows a power function, you make big progress early on, and then improvements gradually slow down (take longer)
Power law of learning
a principle:
repeat a task many times, your performance gets better, but the amount of improvement gets smaller each time follows a predictable pattern - power function
Short-term memory
Short term memory - An intermediate system with a limited capacity, where information resides on its way from the sensory and long-term memory. There are two bottlenecks, precisely between the three ‘systems’.
Sensory -> short-term: Information is lost when unattended to
Short-term -> long-term: Information lost, unless attentively rehearsed into permanent long-term memory.
Spreading activation
Cue activates associated concepts; activation is limited and spreads among all linked structures → more associations (larger fan) → less activation per target → slower retrieval.
Larger fan = greater hemodynamic response but lower activation per target because prefrontal structures must work harder
Anderson (1974): learned person–location sentences; recognition time increases with sum of associations (1–1 fastest, 2–2 slowest).
Strength
How practiced or accessible a memory is.
Determines how easy it is to recall.
Visual sensory store
A system that can store brief memory of visual information that lasts up to ~1 seconds before it fades.
(also called Iconic memory)
Visuospatial sketchpad
A sort of ‘sketchpad’ in our minds, where we temporarily store visual and/or spatial information. Controlled by the “central executive” and considered a “slave system.” All these systems are parts of the “working memory”.
Whole-report procedure
A condition in Sperling’s (1960) experiment on visual sensory memory (iconic memory)
in which participants are asked to
report all the items in a display.
(Contrast with partial-report procedure)
Working memory
part of memory where attended information is held for a short period while mental processing is going on being stored and manipulated
limited, more information degrades the performance
like short-term memory but information is also manipulated to form understanding
Amnesia
Memory loss, typically from damage to the hippocampal area. Damage can lead to both retrograde amnesia (loss of old memories) and anterograde amnesia (inability to form new memories).
Long term potentiation (LTP)
A long-lasting increase in the strength of synaptic connections between neurons, occurring after intense, repeated stimulation. Neurons gets more sensitive by repeated stimulation and needs less input to reactivate afterwards - but diminishing LTP increase when increasing practice.