MindMap Gallery General Psychology Chapter 6 Memory
Memory is the psychological process of accumulating and preserving individual experiences in the mind. From the perspective of information processing, memory is the process by which the human brain encodes, stores and retrieves information input from the outside world. Please forgive me for my bad writing for freshman year homework!
Edited at 2024-11-27 23:08:14This is a mind map about instrument analysis 002, including UV-visible spectrophotometry, infrared absorption spectrometry, mass spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, high performance liquid chromatography, gas chromatography, chromatographic analysis, etc.
這是一篇關於工程結算審計工作流程的思維導圖,主要內容包括:審計後續工作,審計報告的提交與反饋,準備審計報告,審核工程結算書,審核合約變更與索賠,審核成本與費用,審核工程量,初步了解專案。
This is a mind map about the workflow of project settlement audit. The main contents include: audit follow-up work, submission and feedback of audit report, preparation of audit report, review of project settlement document, review of contract changes and claims, review of costs and expenses, Review the engineering quantities and get a preliminary understanding of the project.
This is a mind map about instrument analysis 002, including UV-visible spectrophotometry, infrared absorption spectrometry, mass spectrometry, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, high performance liquid chromatography, gas chromatography, chromatographic analysis, etc.
這是一篇關於工程結算審計工作流程的思維導圖,主要內容包括:審計後續工作,審計報告的提交與反饋,準備審計報告,審核工程結算書,審核合約變更與索賠,審核成本與費用,審核工程量,初步了解專案。
This is a mind map about the workflow of project settlement audit. The main contents include: audit follow-up work, submission and feedback of audit report, preparation of audit report, review of project settlement document, review of contract changes and claims, review of costs and expenses, Review the engineering quantities and get a preliminary understanding of the project.
General Psychology Chapter 6 Memory
memory overview
what is memory
The psychological process of accumulating and preserving individual experiences in the mind
From the perspective of information processing, memory is the process by which the human brain encodes, stores and retrieves information input from the outside world.
Information encoding: It is the process by which people obtain individual experience, or the process of converting external information into forms, which is equivalent to the "memorization" stage.
Storage: It is to keep things perceived, emotions experienced, actions done, problems thought about, etc. in a certain form in people's minds. The way knowledge is stored in the human brain is also called the representation of knowledge
Retrieval: refers to the process of searching for existing information from memory, which is equivalent to the "remembering" stage. including recognition and recollection
Classification of memory
Information retention time
Sensory memory: When the objective stimulus stops acting, the sensory information is saved in a very short period of time, which is the beginning stage of the memory system.
Short-term memory: It is the intermediate stage between sensory memory and long-term memory, and the retention time is about 1 minute. Capacity is limited.
long term memory
Procedural memory: memory of how to do things
Declarative memory: refers to the memory of relevant facts and events
episodic memory
It refers to the memory of an event that an individual has personally experienced and occurred at a certain time and place. It is related to personal experience, is limited by certain time and space, and is not stable enough.
semantic memory
It refers to people’s memory of general knowledge and rules, regardless of special place or time.
Participate unconsciously
explicit memory
It refers to the conscious influence of past experience on the current task. Its impact on behavior is something that individuals can be aware of, and is also called conscious memory.
implicit memory
It refers to the unconscious influence of past experience on the current task, also called unconscious memory. Procedural memory is a form of implicit memory.
chronological order
prospective memory
refers to the memory of completing an activity in the future
retrospective memory
Refers to the memory of past events or previously learned information
sensory memory
Sensory memory encoding and capacity
Sensory memory: Sensory information is retained for a very short period of time after the objective stimulation stops. Encoding of sensory memory relies on the physical characteristics of the information
Code form: Coding according to the physical characteristics of the stimulus, which is a faithful replica of the physical stimulus.
Function: It is the temporary registration of the memory system before further processing of external information to prepare for further processing.
storage of sensory memory
There is sensory memory, which has a considerable capacity but is very short-lived. The retention time of audio and video memory (5~10 seconds) is longer than that of image memory (1 second)
Conversion of sensory memory to short-term memory
Information in sensory memory receives attention, and information that is recognized in time enters short-term memory.
short-term memory and working memory
How short-term memory is encoded
Definition: It is the intermediate stage between sensory memory and long-term memory, and is a memory that can be retained within 1 minute.
Function: Information processor (working memory)
auditory coding
visual encoding
Semantic encoding
Influencing factors: 1. Arousal state • Excitation level of cerebral cortex (most efficient between 11 and 12 am) 2. Depth of processing 3. Chunking – capacity of short-term memory
short-term memory capacity
Storage and forgetting of information in short-term memory
repeat
Mechanical rehearsal: the simple repetition of information in short-term memory, also called retention rehearsal
Elaborate rehearsal: analyzing information in short-term memory to establish connections with existing experiences, also known as integrated rehearsal
Disturbance or subsidence
Fading theory: It is believed that if the information in short-term memory is not repeated, its memory traces will naturally weaken or even fade away.
Interference theory: It is believed that forgetting is caused by interference from other information in short-term memory.
working memory
Working memory refers to a memory system with limited capacity that temporarily stores and processes information. It is a memory of the current working state that is temporarily stored and processed.
Ingredients and respective functions
Speech loop: used to store and process speech or sound-based information
.Visual spatial template: used to store and process visual and spatial information
Episodic buffer: used to store information from the phonological loop, visuospatial templates, and long-term memory.
Central executive system: It is a control system with limited attention resources and an important component of working memory.
Role in advanced cognitive activities
Working memory plays an important role in many high-level cognitive activities (such as problem solving, spatial cognition, language acquisition and processing), and the phonological loop can promote language understanding; the phonological loop plays an important role in vocabulary acquisition; The basis of human advanced cognitive activities. The central executive system plays an important role in language understanding.
How to measure working memory capacity
reading span measurement
Operation span measurement
long term memory
coding
image coding factors
state of consciousness while encoding
Processing depth
Dynamic changes in information storage
Information storage conditions
Organize effective review
Using external memory state
Pay attention to brain health and brain hygiene
information extraction
Recognize
remember
Forgetting of information
Concept: Being able to recognize but not recall is called incomplete forgetting. The temporary inability to recognize or recall is called temporary amnesia. Being unable to recognize or recall is called complete forgetfulness. Permanent inability to recognize or recall is called permanent forgetfulness
factors affecting forgetting
The nature and quantity of memorizing materials
degree of learning
Understand the reporter’s attitude
Serial positions of memorizing materials
Reason for forgetting
decline
interference
depress
Failed to extract
Strategies for Improving Memory
Encoding stage 2. Focus on memory 1. Remember in a awake state 3. Process deep meaning
Storage stage 1. Review in time and review frequently 2. Use detailed retelling (such as connecting with existing knowledge and experience, giving a certain meaning, 4. Reading and recalling alternately classifying, making outlines, and mind maps) 3. Correctly allocate review items Time (distributed review is better than concentrated review) 5. Over-learning appropriately
Retrieval stage 1. Use the principle of encoding specificity 2. Use the testing effect to help memory
implicit memory
General concepts
Implicit memory: The unconscious influence of past experience on the current task, also called unconscious memory.
Explicit memory: refers to the conscious impact of past experience on the current task, also called conscious memory.
Significant differences from explicit memory