Semantic Memory In The Movie 'Inside Out'

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Memory is the process of retaining information over a period of time, such as life. The movie Inside Out gives a great visual representation of how our memory works and how important it is. The movie is based on a young girl named Riley that gets over life’s toughest obstacles with the help of her emotions; joy, sadness, disgust, fear, and anger. These emotions represent her inner thoughts and the voice that we all hear in our head, which is our inner speech. As she, Riley, encounters obstacles her emotions are left with the decision on how to react to the situation at hand. Our memory is made up of many different types of memories; episodic, semantic, and implicit. Episodic memory is the remembrance of a certain event. An example of this …show more content…

These memories are also known as flashbulb memories. The reason that these memories are kept as “core” memories are because they hold a special meaning. Much like Episodic memories, Semantic memories also have meaning. Semantic memory is made up of facts, words, and concepts. An example of Semantic memory in the movie would be when Joy, Sadness, and Bing Bong, Riley’s imaginary friend, were riding the train of thought up to headquarters. Someone had bumped into two crates and those crates were both full of facts and opinions. So, when they got all mixed together on the train cart when Riley would need to use those facts for a project in school, which is where most of your semantic memory is learned, she will not know which one is right. Episodic and Semantic memories are both examples of explicit memories. Explicit …show more content…

Mechanical or rote repetition of the information is a great way to remember this information. The more time you spend rehearsing the information the longer the information will be remembered. This is actually a poor way of remembering things because it doesn’t make the information meaningful; “surface processing”. Elaborative Rehearsal is a more effective way of remembering information through “deep processing”, which is relating the information to information you already know. This technique is used in more in the education system than maintenance rehearsal. Even with these two ways to store things we still run into filling errors. Filling errors are where your brain has filed information incorrectly. The final step in the memory process is retrieval. Retrieval is the locating of stored information and returning it into your conscious thoughts. There are a few cues that help us retrieve them, such as priming, context, and state. Priming is the nonconscious identification or words and objects, by referring in to particular representations or associations in the memory just before carrying out the action or task. The memories that come back to your conscious mind when you are in a certain place or area are called context, dependent memories. When you are in a certain emotional state you many retrieve memories of when you were also in that same emotional

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