Memory Notes
Memory Notes
➢ What is memory?
a) The process by which we encode, store and retrieve information
(Feldman text)
➢ Definitions
❖ H J Eyesenk : Ability of an organism to state the information from
earlier learned response, experience, retention, and reproduce that
into an answer to specific stimuli.
➢ Phase/Stages of Memory
❖ Encoding:
a) Is the process of receiving sensory input and transforming it
into a form or cod which can be stored (Morgan Text)
❖ Storage:
a) The process through which information is retained in memory
(Baron Text)
❖ Retrieval:
a) Material is memory storage is located and brought into
awareness to be useful (Feldman Text)
➢ Flashbulb memories
➢ Priming
➢ Retrieval Cues
➢ Recall
➢ Recognitions
❖ When people are presented with a stimulus and asked whether they
have been exposed to it previously or asked to identify form a list of
alternatives
➢ Sensory memory
❖ A memory system that retains representations of sensory inputs for a
brief period of time.
❖ This storage function of sensory channels is called sensory
memory/sensory register.
❖ Most of the information briefly held in sensory register is lost; what
has been briefly stored decays from the sensory register.
❖ But if we pay attention to and recognize some of the information in
the sensory register, the attended to information is passed on to
short term memory for further processing.
➢ Visual store: where the visual store specialises in visual and spatial
information.
➢ Verbal store: verbal store holds and manipulates material relating
speech, words and numbers.
➢ Episodic buffer: it contains information that represents episode or
events.
➢ Mnemonics: these are the formal techniques for organizing information
in a way that makes it move likely to be remembered.