The Brain, Learning, and Memory
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Transcript The Brain, Learning, and Memory
The Brain, Learning, and Memory
Key: AWL to Study, Low-frequency Vocabulary
What is the connection between the brain, learning, and
memory?
Learning and Memory
• Learning
modification in behavior due to an increase in knowledge or
skills
• Memory
ability to recall information
and experiences
How have the skills and knowledge you’ve acquired
modified your behavior?
Learning and Memory Linked
• Learning relies on memory.
Learning requires the storage and retrieval of information.
• Memory relies on learning.
An individual’s established
knowledge base provides a
structure of past learning.
Incoming data attaches to that
structure though association.
Explain how you have learned something by associating it
with what you already knew.
Breakthroughs in Brain Research
• Use brain imagining techniques
to clarify the process of
memory and learning.
to provide educators and
students with academic
study skill strategies.
How do you think brain imaging techniques might clarify
the processes of learning and memory?
Three Stages of Memory
• Sensory, short-term, and long-term memory
• Sensory memory
visual, auditory, and olfactory information
transfers to short-term memory
• Short-term memory
stores seven single or chunked items for 30 seconds without
repetition
solves problems through reasoning process (example:
organizing facts into a coherent essay)
What is the difference between sensory memory and
short-term memory?
Long-term Memory
• The ability to transfer information from short- to longterm memory is relevant to the learning process.
People use attention, repetition, and association with past
learning to encode information.
Neurologically, encoding
happens when information
is repeatedly processed
in the hippocampus.
How do you encode information into long-term memory?
Critical Factor in Encoding
• Relationship of incoming data to pre-existing mental
frameworks
The more associations made with established learning,
the better new information is retained.
• Memories are not stored in
a single location.
They are complex neuronal
networks spread through the
brain’s entire surface.
What is the most important factor in the transfer of
information from short- to long-term memory?
Research-based Study Techniques
• Access background knowledge on a topic.
This primes the brain to make associations.
• Pose mental questions while learning.
Compare and contrast new information with your current
understanding.
• Classify and categorize.
facilitates retention because it involves making connections
• Grasp overall concept to fit in details.
Selectively highlight information.
Take notes on main ideas.
Outline and summarize.
Have you used these techniques?
Retention
• Encoding does not ensure retention.
80% of learning is forgotten within 48 hours.
• Need to activate storage and retrieval processes:
Review: retrieval of information temporarily copies it into
working memory for further processing in hippocampus.
REM sleep: memories are replayed
and reinforced in hippocampus.
Explain two ways to help the brain retain information.
Ebbinghaus: Optimal Review
• Preliminary review
new learning peaks after 10 minutes
• Subsequent study
at one-day, one-week, one-month, and six-month intervals
Permanent memory traces are stored where sensory inputs
first occurred.
They are connected in neuronal networks.
How can what you’ve learned in this presentation help
you in your TOEFL study?