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Memory Chapter 1 - AQA

Chapter 1 MemoryIt just weighs about 3 pounds about the same as 1 bags of sugar. And holds about 100 billion nerve cells, and all your memories. How are those memories stored? What do the memories actually look like in the brain? Why do you think you remember some things and not others? Are memories accurate? If they are not accurate, what makes them lack accuracy?ContentsProcesses of Memory Encoding, storage and retrieval 12 A study of encoding 14 Different types of Memory 16 Structures of Memory The multi-store model of Memory 18 Primacy and recency effects in recall 20 Memory as an active process Barlett s War of the Ghosts study 22 The theory of reconstructive Memory 24 Factors affecting the accuracy of Memory Interference 26 Context 28 False memories 30 Revision summary 32 Practic

Another example is learning the alphabet to the tune of Twinkle twinkle little star – the rhyme is encoded acoustically. Semantic encoding ‘Semantic’ refers to meaning. We all know thousands of words and your semantic memory is the meaning of these words – that is your ability to understand and use words and concepts.

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