Studying Memory, Memory And Memory Retention

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Studying Memory/Memory Retention
Memory: the storage and retrieval of information or skills, learned over time.
It is information that can be acquired, stored, and retrieved.
Three behaviors that show memory is functioning:
Recall: person must retrieve information learned in the past
Recognition: person needs to identify the items previously learned
Relearning: assesses the speed of when learning material again, once it has been forgotten.
Ebbinghaus’ Retention Curve: the more times he practiced on day 1, the less he had to relearn on day 2.
Overlearning of verbal information increases the continued possession, especially over time.
We remember more than we can recall.
Memory Models
Information-processing models are analogies used to compare …show more content…

Testing effect: Introduced by Henry Roediger and Jeffrey Karpicke, testing yourself over the material you are learning helps you better retain information.
Levels of Processing
We process verbal information on different levels: shallow processing, and deep processing (semantic processing).
Shallow processing is processing things at a ground level while deep processing focuses on the meaning of the words being spoken.
Making Material Personally Meaningful
We memorize things more easily if it has a meaningful connection to you. For example, if you're trying to memorize a set of words that have empty meaning, you won't be as successful if you were memorizing words with meaning.
Self-reference effect: if asked to describe someone with adjectives, we are less likely to remember. If asked to describe ourselves, we remember more clearly since no one knows us better than ourselves. It happens more in western cultures since we are usually more selfish than other cultures.
The amount of information remembered all depends on how much time you spent memorizing and whether or not you semantically and meaningfully practiced

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