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1st year master notes - Learning and Memory - Behavioural Neuroscience- Biomedical Sciences $10.24   Add to cart

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1st year master notes - Learning and Memory - Behavioural Neuroscience- Biomedical Sciences

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Notes from class of prof. Debby Van Dam covering the memory and learning processes. It also covers the chapter learning and memory from the book - physiology of behaviour.

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  • March 21, 2021
  • 33
  • 2020/2021
  • Class notes
  • Prof. debby van dam
  • All classes
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LEARNING AND MEMORY
Behavioral Neurosciences notes

, WHAT IS LEARNING AND MEMORY?

Learning allows us to acquire new information and refers to the acts, process or

experience of gaining knowledge or skill. Memory is the process by which what is

learned persists over time. Memory is basically a long-term change in the nervous

system following learning.

Experiences are not ‘stored’ in the brain as memories; rather, they change the way

we perceive, perform, think, plan etc. Whenever you learn something, you gain the

knowledge or skill, then certain behavioral modifications especially through

experience occur = CNS changes -> results in formation of memory which further

can be stored and retrieved whenever you needed. Learning, memory and their

effects on behaviour are only possible through plasticity. The information-

processing model of memory provides an overall summary of the basic steps linking

learning to memory. In this model, learning produces changes in the nervous system

by encoding the new information to be learned. The encoding process includes

consolidation, which strengthens changes associated with the initial information

that is learned, helping to make a more permanent change to the nervous system

(i.e., a memory). After being consolidated, the memory is stored via these

persistent changes in the nervous system. Finally, retrieval is the process of

accessing and using the information stored in the neural changes that make up a

memory to engage in a behavior.

Memory

Again, memory is the process of encoding, storing and retrieving experiences and

knowledge. Some memories are the ones we are aware of and we can consciously

recall them -> known as Explicit Memories.

,Implicit Memories -> are ones that we cannot consciously access. This type of

memory uses past experiences to remember things without thinking about them.

Like using motor muscle to move lips when we speak or produce sound the way we

learned it.

What is a Forgetting Curve?

Also known as Ebbinghaus’ forgetting curve, shows how information is lost over

time when you don’t try to retain it. A typical graph shows that humans tend to

halve their memory of newly learned knowledge in a matter of days or weeks unless

they consciously review the learned material.




According to Ebbinghaus there are two key principles for learning:

1) Memories – they have different time spans (can be short vs long lived)

2) Repetition – life span memory increases

, Primary vs Secondary Memory

Primary memory = it can be referred to as short-term memory and it only lasts for

seconds and minutes – it is an extension of the present moment

Secondary memory = this can be referred to as long-term memory and it lasts

much longer, weeks – years, it can be consulted by reaching back into the past

According to F. C. Bartlett – remembering is not the re=excitation of innumerable

fixed, lifeless and fragmentary traces. It is an imaginative reconstruction or

construction = the idea behind this is that remembering is an active process – it is

not just pressing ‘play button’.

Types of Memories

There are several types of memories, some of which are forgotten very quickly

while others remain a lifetime. The types of memories are:

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