Long-Term Memory
Long-term memory has a large capacity, contains our memories for experiences and the information that we have gathered and are gathering over our lifetime. Long-term memory information is stored based on meaning and the importance of the information. Long-term memory subdivisions are episodic memory (memory for events that happen to you and allow you to travel back in time in order to re-experience your memories), semantic memory (your organized knowledge of the world, words and information), and procedural memory (knowledge about how to do things). In addition, it has three aspects. They are encoding (the initial gathering of information), retrieval (the locating stored information and accessing that information), and finally autobiographical information (that is the information that pertains to ourselves).
Try this to test your memory of an object we use everyday but tend to ignore.
Reference:
Matlin, M.W.(2005). Cognition (6th edition). John Wiley and Sons
Try this to test your memory of an object we use everyday but tend to ignore.
Reference:
Matlin, M.W.(2005). Cognition (6th edition). John Wiley and Sons
1 Comments:
I don't think you understood the hyperlink
Try one more time, go back to the step-by-step text I provided.
To do a hyperlink just highlight a word highlight and then paste the web address in that little box that pops up.
For example in your text:
"Go to www.mistupid.com/psych/pennies to test your memory of an object that we use and tend to disregard everyday."
You should do something like:
"Try this [highlight and attach the hyperlink to the word "this"] if you would like to test your memory of an object that we use and tend to disregard everyday."
By Ed Psy Topics, at 2:09 PM PDT
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