Types Of Memory

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Human has a brain. Our brains contain nerve cells that work as memory in daily life. The memory process is cognitive process which involve encode, store, retrieve the information (Baddeley, A., 1992). In this report, we are introduced to three different types of memory (Feldman, & Robert, S., 2011).
The first type of human memory is called sensory memory. Sensory memory is the earliest stage which is important to obtain and process surrounding information through our five senses accurately but in very short time (Explorable.com, 2011). Although it has a wide scope of capacity but these information obtained are unorganized. Hence, it is becoming part of the perception process. We sometimes able to get the impressions of sensory information after the original stimuli have stopped. The impression is sometimes called ‘afterimage’. However, sensory memory not used to be rehearsed and cause the information diminished. The sub-division of sensory memory which are iconic memory and echoic memory tend to receive the most attention studied in types of sensory memory (Explorable.com, 2011).
Echoic memory involves in sound information process. Echoic memories can be stayed for several seconds before those information lost. An example of echoic memory test is asking a subject to remember a conversation with someone. If the subject responds instantly, the possibility of remembering all the words is high. However, if the subject waits a few seconds, the subject would have little difficulty to repeating back the word by word in a conversation because echoic memory only lasts a few seconds. On the other hand, iconic memory also lasts for only a short second. Iconic memories are the visual descriptions that relates to the memory of sight. For exam...

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... better. Thus, the procedural memory is called as implicit memory as we do not consciously remember the practiced memories into our skills (Tulving & Thomson, 1973). In priming, if we get into something more frequently we are primed to retrieve the information easier (Positscience.com, 2014). Our brain seems to catch things that we use more or experience more. For example, cooking curry laksa will becomes smoother if we get trained every day.
In conclusion, we know that memory is divided into sensory memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory which are linked from the surface level to the deep level (Feldman, & Robert, S., 2011). The process of input, retain, and recall are parts of our brains’ cognitive process (Baddeley, A., 1992). As the memory processes are parts inside our brains, memory becomes a need to us and we rely on them in our everyday activities.

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