首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
Memory I. Introduction to memory — the capacity for storing and______information【T1】______ —______, constructed, and edited【T2】_
Memory I. Introduction to memory — the capacity for storing and______information【T1】______ —______, constructed, and edited【T2】_
admin
2016-10-21
39
问题
Memory
I. Introduction to memory
— the capacity for storing and______information【T1】______
—______, constructed, and edited【T2】______
— boundless and full of holes/distortions
II. ______【T3】______
A. ______【T4】______
— processing information into memory
— automatic and______processing【T5】______
— different ways of encoding verbal information
a. structural encoding: forms
b. phonemic encoding: ______【T6】______
c. semantic encoding: meanings
deeper processing
______memory【T7】______
B. storage: a______model【T8】______
— sensory memory
of large capacity: ______【T9】______
— short-term memory
of limited capacity: enhanced by______and chunking【T10】______
working memory: allowing storage and______【T11】______
-______【T12】______
of infinite capacity: lasting a lifetime
C. retrieval: getting information______【T13】______
______: stimuli that help the process of retrieval【T14】______
a. associations
b. context
c. ______【T15】______
III. Conclusion
【T8】
In this section you will hear a mini-lecture. You will hear the mini-lecture ONCE ONLY. While listening to the mini-lecture, please complete the gap-filling task on ANSWER SHEET ONE and write NO MORE THAN THREE WORDS for each gap. Make sure the word(s)you fill in is(are)both grammatically and semantically acceptable. You may use the blank sheet for note-taking.
You have THIRTY seconds to preview the gap-filling task.
(a thirty-second interval)
Now listen to the mini-lecture. When it is over, you will be given THREE minutes to check your work.
Memory
Good afternoon. Memory is something that we live with every minute, but we are not that familiar with it as we suppose. It is just one of many phenomena that demonstrate the brain’s complexity. On a basic level, memory is the capacity for storing and retrieving information, but memories are not simply recorded and neatly stored. Our memories are selected, constructed, and edited not just by us but by the world around us. We have an astounding, boundless capacity for memory, but our memories are also faulty, full of holes and distortions, and hampered by unreliable data retrieval systems.
In today’s lecture, I’m going to introduce to you the processes of memory.
Memory researchers explore the many mysteries of remembering. They examine why the name of a favorite elementary school teacher might leap easily to mind, while the time and place of a committee meeting prove maddeningly elusive. They try to explain why we have trouble remembering a person’s name — only to recall it later, after the person is gone. We still have much to learn about how memories are made and what determines whether they last or fade away.
Studies show whether something is remembered or forgotten is, specifically, determined by the three processes involved in memory: encoding, storage, and retrieval.
Encoding refers to processing information into memory. People automatically encode some types of information without being aware of it. For example, most people probably can recall where they ate lunch yesterday, even though they didn’t try to remember this information. However, other types of information become encoded only if people pay attention to it. College students will probably not remember all the material in their textbooks unless they pay close attention while they’re reading.
There are several different ways of encoding verbal information:
Structural encoding, which focuses on what words look like. For instance, one might note whether words are long or short, in uppercase or lowercase, or handwritten or typed.
Phonemic encoding, which focuses on how words sound.
Semantic encoding, which focuses on the meaning of words. It requires a deeper level of processing than structural or phonemic encoding and usually results in better memory.
After information enters the brain, it has to be stored or maintained. To describe the process of storage, many psychologists use the three-stage model proposed by Richard Atkinson and Richard Shiffrin. According to this model, information is stored sequentially in three memory systems: sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory.
Sensory memory stores incoming sensory information in detail but only for an instant. The capacity of sensory memory is very large, but the information in it is unprocessed. If a flashlight moves quickly in a circle inside a dark room, people will see a circle of light rather than the individual points through which the flashlight moved. This happens because sensory memory holds the successive images of the moving flashlight long enough for the brain to see a circle.
Some of the information in sensory memory transfers to short-term memory, which can hold information for approximately twenty seconds. Rehearsing can help keep information in short-term memory longer. When people repeat a new phone number over and over to themselves, they are rehearsing it and keeping it in short-term memory.
Short-term memory has a limited capacity: It can store about seven pieces of information, plus or minus two pieces. These pieces of information can be small, such as individual numbers or letters, or larger, such as familiar strings of numbers, words, or sentences. A method called chunking can help to increase the capacity of short-term memory. Chunking combines small bits of information into bigger, familiar pieces.
Psychologists today consider short-term memory to be a working memory. Rather than being just a temporary information storage system, working memory is an active system. Information can be kept in working memory while people process or examine it. Working memory allows people to temporarily store and manipulate visual images, store information while trying to make decisions, and remember a phone number long enough to write it down.
Then, information can be transferred from short-term memory to long-term memory and from long-term memory back to short-term memory. Long-term memory has an almost infinite capacity, and information in long-term memory usually stays there for the duration of a person’s life. However, this doesn’t mean that people will always be able to remember what’s in their long-term memory — they may not be able to retrieve information that’s there.
Finally, we come to retrieval. It is the process of getting information out of memory, in which retrieval cues play an important part. They are stimuli that help the process of retrieval. They include associations, context, and mood. Because the brain stores information as networks of associated concepts, recalling a particular word becomes easier if another related word is recalled first. With regard to context, people can often remember an event by placing themselves in the same context they were in when the event happened. Moreover, if people are in the same mood they were in during an event, they may have an easier time recalling the event. If we can make conscious use of these retrieval cues, we can largely enhance our memory.
Today, we’ve looked at the processes of memory, i.e. encoding, storage and retrieval, and the three stages of memory. We are going to look deeper into the issue of memory next time. Thank you.
选项
答案
three-stage
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/zk7O777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Somedeviantusesoftechnologyarecriminal,thoughnotallparticipantsseeitthatway.Downloadingofmusic,typicallyprot
Kissingissocommonthoughwerarelyaskwhyhumanstouch【M1】______theirlipstogethertoshowaffection.Oneobviousanswer
CanadianliteratureiswritteninbothEnglishandFrench.Historicallythereisconnectionwith______;geographically,theU.S.
Manythingsmakepeoplethinkartistsareweirdandtheweirdestmaybethis:artists’onlyjobistoexploreemotions,andyet
______wontheNobelPrizeforliteraturewithhisnovels,TheGrapesofWrath,InDubiousBattle,OfMiceandMen,forhisreali
ReviewingthedecadethatfollowedWorldWarn,Cartwrightspeaksofthe"excitementandoptimism"ofAmericansocialpsycholo
______areboundmorphemesbecausetheycannotbeusedasseparatewords.
Morepeopledieoftuberculosis(结核病)thanofanyotherdiseasecausedbyasingleagent.Thishasprobablybeenthecaseinquit
Thenatureofworkischanging.Recenttechnologicaladvances,ashiftfrommanufacturingtoservice-basedorganizations,incr
Cuckoldsaremenwhosewivesgavebirthtoinfantsthatwereblatantlynottheirown.Thewellknowntrickeryofthecuckoo,the
随机试题
烹饪原料初加工的一般卫生要求应包括________等。
F股份有限公司为上市公司,2012年末简要财务报表如下:(1)简要资产负债表:(2)简要利润表:(3)F股份公司2012年年初流通在外的普通股股数2000万股,每股面值1元,2012年7月1日增发1000万股,每股面值1元;年末每股市价为16.5
试述从众行为的表现形式。
A.屈膝,膝内侧横纹头上方凹陷中B.屈膝,窝内侧半腱肌与半膜肌腱之间C.外髁高点上7寸,腓骨后缘D.外髁高点上7寸,腓骨前缘E.外髁高点与跟腱之间凹陷处直上7寸,承山穴外下方
药物引起的接触性口炎多发生在接触药物后
某建筑公司与甲企业签订一份建筑承包合同,合同记载承包工程金额6000万元。施工期间,该建筑公司将其中价值800万元的安装工程转包给乙企业,并签订转包合同。该建筑公司此项业务应缴纳印花税为()万元。
履历分析用于人员测评的特点包括()。
高中英语课程改革在课程评价方面力图建立()的英语课程评价体系。
以下关于二叉排序树的说法正确的是()。 Ⅰ在二叉排序树中,每个结点的关键字都比左孩子关键字大,比右孩子关键字小 Ⅱ每个结点的关键字都比左孩子关键字大,比右孩子关键字小,这样的二叉树都是二叉排序树 Ⅲ在二叉排序树中,新插入的关键字总
Talkingtoforeignersisfunifyou______therighttimeandplace.
最新回复
(
0
)