1 / 12

Monday 6 February Topic: Human Memory

OBJECTIVE: You will be able to compare and contrast the structures of the brain responsible for various types of memory. Monday 6 February Topic: Human Memory. DO NOW: Prove that you read the article. HW: Read “Do the ‘Eyes’ Have It?” and write a reflection (summary + your opinions).

ugo
Télécharger la présentation

Monday 6 February Topic: Human Memory

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. OBJECTIVE: You will be able to compare and contrast the structures of the brain responsible for various types of memory. Monday 6 FebruaryTopic: Human Memory DO NOW: Prove that you read the article. HW: Read “Do the ‘Eyes’ Have It?” and write a reflection (summary + your opinions)

  2. OBJECTIVE: You will be able to compare and contrast the structures of the brain responsible for various types of memory. What is memory? • The mental capacity or faculty of retaining and reviving facts, events, impressions, etc., or of recalling or recognizing previous experiences.

  3. OBJECTIVE: You will be able to compare and contrast the structures of the brain responsible for various types of memory. Long term memory • Stored throughout the brain • Different lobes store different senses • Can last anywhere from days to weeks to years to a lifetime • Limitless in terms of how many things you can remember

  4. OBJECTIVE: You will be able to compare and contrast the structures of the brain responsible for various types of memory. Short term memory • Can only store 7 +/- 2 items at a time • Only lasts from minutes to days • Can become long term with repetition/practice

  5. OBJECTIVE: You will be able to compare and contrast the structures of the brain responsible for various types of memory. Sensory memory • What we perceive from the world • Only 200-500 milliseconds long • Becomes short term memory if we’re paying attention to it

  6. OBJECTIVE: You will be able to compare and contrast the structures of the brain responsible for various types of memory. Exit ticket • What implications do you think these types of memory would have on witness statements? • Consider that statements are taken at the crime scene, formal interviews may be a few days later, and testifying in court may be years later

  7. OBJECTIVE: You will be able to describe why witness memory is sometimes unreliable. Friday 10 FebruaryTopic: Memory Reliability DO NOW: Describe how sensory memory turns into short term memory turns into long term memory. HW: typewriter comparison activity

  8. OBJECTIVE: You will be able to describe why witness memory is sometimes unreliable. Memory summary • SENSORY: • lasts for milliseconds • pertains to the 6 senses • SHORT TERM: • up to a few days • from paying attention to sensory memory • LONG TERM: • from hours to weeks to years to A LIFETIME • LIMITLESS

  9. OBJECTIVE: You will be able to describe why witness memory is sometimes unreliable. Recall activity • Most crimes are left without a lot of information because people simply aren’t paying a lot of attention to their surroundings.

  10. OBJECTIVE: You will be able to describe why witness memory is sometimes unreliable. Recall activity • INDIVIDUALLY, complete the first two boxes on the handout about the competition yesterday • WITH YOUR NEIGHBOR, fill in as much information that you can about the surroundings and the participants

  11. Progress reports • Every Friday • NC = it should have been submitted at this point • ** = assignment occurred, hasn’t been graded yet (doesn’t factor into grade) • X = excused absence, work still needs to be made up (all turn into NC at the end of the quarter)

  12. Exit Ticket • How did the confidence of your recall of details get affected by discussing it with somebody else? That is, were you influence in any way? • Why is it important to take witness statements at the scene of the crime, despite the emotional state of the witness? • Were you surprised by what you were able to remember? Describe (either specific details that you recalled, or general amount of information)

More Related