The Mind Explained Memory Worksheet
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Long-term memory refers to information that exists without having to access short-term memory. For example, if you add up a set of numbers, you will never remember the numbers from that addition. Instead you will remember how to add them up, which allows you to reach a conclusion when asked about its sum. This is also important in long term recall, we will never remember facts and numbers in the same manner as we can remember how to add them up. The information stored in long-term memory tend to be stored in a similar way, in a similar mindset and context, and in a very similar form - this is how memory works.
When accessing a memory, the person is working in the same way - they are looking for facts and information in relation to their experiences. This is a very similar thing to scanning the internet for new findings, which is why the phrase, 'finding a memory' is used in this sense. The difference being that in internet searching, you may receive a 'yes' result (new information about a memory), and a 'no' result (information about a memory that conflicts with what you want to know).[2] In exhaustive memory searching you will receive 'yes' results about memories that you may want to use at some point in the future.
"As researchers in the field of memory have become more adept at measuring the brain and mapping the various parts that contribute to memory creation, it has become apparent that even though there are multiple regions of the brain involved with the process of memory, it is generally agreed that these regions are activated in a particular order (i.e. they occur at the same time)." (www.medicaldaily.com)
Memory depends on the senses to make an experience strong enough to'stick' in your memory. Sometimes it is difficult to create strong memories -- maybe it was at a crowded party, and you can't remember anyone's name. d2c66b5586