Quiz: Memory Loss and Interference — 8 perguntas

Perguntas e respostas detalhadas

1. What is the primary impact of anterograde amnesia on memory processes?

It prevents the recall of old memories.
It enhances the ability to remember recent events.
It causes complete loss of all memory functions.
It disrupts the formation of new long-term memories.

It disrupts the formation of new long-term memories.

Explicação

Anterograde amnesia specifically disrupts the formation of new long-term memories, as it impairs the brain's ability to encode and consolidate new information after the onset of the condition. The source states that individuals with this condition cannot create lasting memories of events encountered after the injury, which directly indicates a disruption in memory formation.

2. What characterizes anterograde amnesia?

Inability to recall past memories from before the brain injury
Inability to form new long-term memories after the injury
Complete loss of all memory functions regardless of time
Enhanced memory for emotional events but forgetfulness for neutral ones

Inability to form new long-term memories after the injury

Explicação

Anterograde amnesia specifically affects the ability to form new long-term memories after brain injury, while past memories formed before remain intact. The other options describe either different memory issues or exaggerated conditions.

3. What is a primary cause of forgetting associated with proactive interference?

Memory traces weakening without rehearsal
The failure to encode new information properly
The gradual fading of memories over time
Old memories disrupting the recall of new information

Old memories disrupting the recall of new information

Explicação

Proactive interference causes forgetting by disrupting the ability to recall new information due to interference from existing older memories, as explicitly described in the source. The other options refer to different causes of forgetting, such as decay or encoding failure, but do not pertain specifically to proactive interference.

4. According to the revision sheet, what is a common cause of anterograde amnesia?

Genetic mutations present from birth
Brain infections or damage to memory-related areas
Excessive rehearsal of memories
Psychological trauma without physical brain injury

Brain infections or damage to memory-related areas

Explicação

The sheet identifies brain infections or damage to memory-related areas as causes of anterograde amnesia. Genetic issues might contribute to other disorders, but not specifically to this condition, and excessive rehearsal actually supports memory, not impairs it.

5. What does Ebbinghaus' forgetting curve demonstrate?

Memory retention remains stable over time without rehearsal
Memory declines rapidly after learning and then levels off
Memory improves with time as memories consolidate
Memory decay occurs only if misinformation is introduced

Memory declines rapidly after learning and then levels off

Explicação

Ebbinghaus' curve shows that memory retention drops quickly shortly after learning, and then the rate of forgetting slows down. This highlights the importance of initial rehearsal for memory retention.

6. What is proactive interference?

When new memories disrupt the recall of old memories
When old memories interfere with the formation or recall of new ones
Memory loss caused solely by brain injury
The process of strengthening memories to prevent interference

When old memories interfere with the formation or recall of new ones

Explicação

Proactive interference occurs when prior memories hinder the formation or retrieval of newer memories, contrary to retroactive interference where new memories affect older ones.

7. Which process involves memories that never properly enter long-term storage, leading to forgetting?

Memory decay
Encoding failure
Repression
Consolidation

Encoding failure

Explicação

Encoding failure refers to the failure to transfer information from short-term to long-term memory, causing it to be forgotten. Decay involves fading over time, and consolidation stabilizes memories, so they are less likely to be lost.

8. What distinguishes repressed memories from other memory phenomena discussed in the sheet?

Repressed memories are intentionally forgotten with full awareness
Repressed memories involve unconscious blocking of troubling past events
Repressed memories are always accurate and verifiable
Repressed memories are stored only in short-term memory and never consolidated

Repressed memories involve unconscious blocking of troubling past events

Explicação

Repressed memories involve unconsciously blocking distressing memories, often without awareness. They differ from simple forgetting or interference because of the subconscious nature of suppression.

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Anterograde amnesia — definition?

Inability to form new long-term memories.

Anterograde amnesia — effect?

Inability to form new long-term memories

Forgetting — interference role?

Disrupted by competing old or new memories.

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