
Remembering and Forgetting: Crash Course Psychology #14
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Date: 2022-04-04
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Comments and reviews: 10
Karoline
I think recognition and recall plays a role in this video. Because when people implement this into studying and how to retain information accurately. Recognition is when you recognize something you have seen before for the first time, then when you see them again you recognize it because you've seen it before.
For recall, this takes a lot of practice to use the art of recalling and a lot of people mostly younger or little older will hate this, but you have to quiz or test yourself without looking at the source materials. Including your notes, the book, and textbook because recalling by transcribing the information into your own words, or recalling it when you do the practice test allow you to be more self-aware you're actively recalling not recognizing the information.
Also if anyone of you attempts and can't retain information by recalling you're only exposing yourself to the sources which show the answers, or information from your notes, books or textbooks. And that's not how can you surely retain the information properly because you're taking away the benefit of being able to recall without looking at your notes, book or textbook.
For making flashcards, the traditional way of studying them is passive, and it's alright if they prefer the traditional and outdated way of studying their study decks. To tell the truth, the flaws of studying them is you don't know what it's asking you and give you a clue to recall the information without quickly looking at the answer impatiently. Before making flashcards you have to review or study your materials before making them. Otherwise, you'll be dumbfounded or lost because you haven't reviewed the material yet impatiently and straightforwardly make the flashcards.
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I think recognition and recall plays a role in this video. Because when people implement this into studying and how to retain information accurately. Recognition is when you recognize something you have seen before for the first time, then when you see them again you recognize it because you've seen it before.
For recall, this takes a lot of practice to use the art of recalling and a lot of people mostly younger or little older will hate this, but you have to quiz or test yourself without looking at the source materials. Including your notes, the book, and textbook because recalling by transcribing the information into your own words, or recalling it when you do the practice test allow you to be more self-aware you're actively recalling not recognizing the information.
Also if anyone of you attempts and can't retain information by recalling you're only exposing yourself to the sources which show the answers, or information from your notes, books or textbooks. And that's not how can you surely retain the information properly because you're taking away the benefit of being able to recall without looking at your notes, book or textbook.
For making flashcards, the traditional way of studying them is passive, and it's alright if they prefer the traditional and outdated way of studying their study decks. To tell the truth, the flaws of studying them is you don't know what it's asking you and give you a clue to recall the information without quickly looking at the answer impatiently. Before making flashcards you have to review or study your materials before making them. Otherwise, you'll be dumbfounded or lost because you haven't reviewed the material yet impatiently and straightforwardly make the flashcards.
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Eugene
This episode is a perfect example of how the justice system baffles me. In the court room, eyewitness testimony is looked at as a very strong form of evidence, but in the sciences eyewitness testimony is probably the lowest form of evidence. Imagine trying to prove a scientific theory and your main evidence is because I saw it, you would be laughed at until you brought back some charts or data to back up your hypothesis. In the courtroom however, eyewitness testimony is considered one of the strongest forms of evidence, and no one even seems to consider how easily it is to trick our senses, or how inaccurate memories can be, not even mentioning the person possibly having motive to portray things a certain way or strait up lie.
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This episode is a perfect example of how the justice system baffles me. In the court room, eyewitness testimony is looked at as a very strong form of evidence, but in the sciences eyewitness testimony is probably the lowest form of evidence. Imagine trying to prove a scientific theory and your main evidence is because I saw it, you would be laughed at until you brought back some charts or data to back up your hypothesis. In the courtroom however, eyewitness testimony is considered one of the strongest forms of evidence, and no one even seems to consider how easily it is to trick our senses, or how inaccurate memories can be, not even mentioning the person possibly having motive to portray things a certain way or strait up lie.
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David
I really dislike how you said at the end that Bernice is a nice lady. She almost caused an innocent barista to go to jail. She's not a nice lady. We are not defined by the intentions of our actions, if that was so, Hitler would be no worse than any exterminator, because his intentions were the same. We judge Hitler based on the consequences of his actions. The barista was arrested, taken to prison, and dragged through a criminal trial where he had to pay for lawyers. Bernice is a horrible person. You don't get to get away from the morality of your actions just because you didn't mean any harm
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I really dislike how you said at the end that Bernice is a nice lady. She almost caused an innocent barista to go to jail. She's not a nice lady. We are not defined by the intentions of our actions, if that was so, Hitler would be no worse than any exterminator, because his intentions were the same. We judge Hitler based on the consequences of his actions. The barista was arrested, taken to prison, and dragged through a criminal trial where he had to pay for lawyers. Bernice is a horrible person. You don't get to get away from the morality of your actions just because you didn't mean any harm
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rudy
FOR MY OWN BENEFIT
-Priming(memoryless memory) exposer to one memory influences your other memories
-Mood congruent- when a mood helps you retrieve a memory
-Serial position effect- your more likely to remember things first and last on a list then in-between
-Storage decay- natural forgetting overtime
-Proactive interference- old learning gets in the way of knew learning
-Retroactive interference- knew learning gets in the way of old learning
-Misinformation- post information of an event influences what actually get
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FOR MY OWN BENEFIT
-Priming(memoryless memory) exposer to one memory influences your other memories
-Mood congruent- when a mood helps you retrieve a memory
-Serial position effect- your more likely to remember things first and last on a list then in-between
-Storage decay- natural forgetting overtime
-Proactive interference- old learning gets in the way of knew learning
-Retroactive interference- knew learning gets in the way of old learning
-Misinformation- post information of an event influences what actually get
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Margret
I have a question though. Based on this theory, only the testimony produced straight after the event took place can be seen as more or less valid. Still, it is well known to most that if it is a question of a stressful situation, many aspects get recorded, but only emerge with time, when you calm down, all these things begin to come to you. How does this tie in?
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I have a question though. Based on this theory, only the testimony produced straight after the event took place can be seen as more or less valid. Still, it is well known to most that if it is a question of a stressful situation, many aspects get recorded, but only emerge with time, when you calm down, all these things begin to come to you. How does this tie in?
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Bradley
I assume he does not actually speak like that in normal conversation, and he may be trying to be cute or funny or make the video interesting but he just makes it painful to watch. I'd rather listen and watch someone in monotone just tell the story, but my professor makes me watch this guy.
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I assume he does not actually speak like that in normal conversation, and he may be trying to be cute or funny or make the video interesting but he just makes it painful to watch. I'd rather listen and watch someone in monotone just tell the story, but my professor makes me watch this guy.
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The
This happens to me all the time I try very hard to record things in mind but I forget D: , now give me a solution of how to fix/improve/defrag it so I can use my memory more efficiently and access my stored data like a Google search like in a matter of micro milliseconds: D
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This happens to me all the time I try very hard to record things in mind but I forget D: , now give me a solution of how to fix/improve/defrag it so I can use my memory more efficiently and access my stored data like a Google search like in a matter of micro milliseconds: D
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madcat
Having just(an hour ago) been scanning through the videos of this series, I was subject to this effect. I remembered the begging and where I stopped much better than the middle.
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Having just(an hour ago) been scanning through the videos of this series, I was subject to this effect. I remembered the begging and where I stopped much better than the middle.
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Vanessa
i will never forget that when I was mugged my screensaver was a picture of January Jones as Betty Draper and I was listening to Edith Pilaf's La vie en rose
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i will never forget that when I was mugged my screensaver was a picture of January Jones as Betty Draper and I was listening to Edith Pilaf's La vie en rose
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iprocrastinating
retroactive learning, so that-s what that is. i sometimes can-t fluently speak my native language after learning to speak english.
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retroactive learning, so that-s what that is. i sometimes can-t fluently speak my native language after learning to speak english.
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