Difference between the Types of Memory

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Difference between the types of memory
There are 4 main types of memory and they are as follows, sensory memory, short term memory, working memory , and long-term memory. Sensory memory relates to the ability for our brain to retain memories of what our sensory receptors received after the initial stimulus has already passed. Short term memory relates to the ability to, “hold a limited amount of information in a very accessible state temporarily”, (Cowan 2008) this gives us the ability to turn our sensory memory into short snippets of memory which we can readily recall, but only for a short amount of time. The third type of memory is working memory which is somewhat of an overlap with short term memory though it pulls from other resources and allows for a greater use of cognitive capabilities. Working memory is paired with these cognitive functions in order to plan actions, for example when your grocery shopping and you forget to write down a list working memory would be not only you remembering which items you originally had on the list but also which ones you crossed off the list when you bought each item. So that ticking off of each item in your head refers to the planning aspect of working memory that short term memory fails to fully encompass. The last form of memory is long term memory this is the memory that we store for long periods of time and these memories usually are either stored here due to repetition or due to some sort of emotional attachment that allows a memory to more vigorously imprint in our minds.
Ubiquitin-proteasome System and a renewed look at the importance of PKA and CaMKII in long term memory development.
For many years it was thought that PKA or Protein Kinase A and Calcium-calmodulin-dpendant-...

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...ase A, Regulates Rpt6 Phosphorylation and Proteosome Activity during the Formation of Long-term Memories." Front Behav Neurosci 7 (2013): 115. Web.

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(http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1074742707000639)

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