GE CLST 73B Chapter Notes - Chapter 13: Temporal Lobe, Anterograde Amnesia, Mammillary Body

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There are several kinds of learning and memory. Learning: the process of acquiring new information. Memory: the ability to store and retrieve that information. Amnesia: a severe impairment of memory usually as a result of accident or disease. Retrograde amnesia: loss of memories that formed prior to an event. While this is common it is unlikely that longer-term (complete) retrograde memory loss has ever occurred. Couldn"t retain any new memories severe case of anterograde amnesia. Anterograde amnesia: inability to form new memories after an event. He would perform slightly better on the tests daily even though he could not retain any memory of the previous day. Declarative memory: facts and info acquired through learning. Difficult to test on animals because it is usually a word list or something we had to memorize / learn prior. Nondeclarative memory: is shown by performance rather than by conscious recollection.

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