Art Theory

Remembering and Forgetting: Crash Course Psychology #14



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In this REALLY IMPORTANT EPISODE of Crash Course Psychology, Hank talks about how we remember and forget things, why our memories are fallible, and the dangers that can pose.

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Chapters:
Introduction: The Banana Thief 00:00
How Memories are Stored 1:12
Memory Retrieval Cues 1:58
Priming & Context-Dependent Memory 2:45
State-Dependent & Mood-Congruent Memory 3:31
Serial Position, Primacy, & Recency Effects 3:52
How Information is Forgotten 4:43
Interference & Misinformation 6:21
Issues with Eyewitness Accounts 7:02
Review & Credits 9:25

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22 thoughts on “Remembering and Forgetting: Crash Course Psychology #14
  1. 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.

  2. "Hmm, gotta get my Math book to look at my trigonometry notes"
    gets up to go get it
    literally 0.000000001 seconds later
    "WhY aM i HeAr?"
    goes back
    remembers math notes
    "REEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE"

  3. 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

  4. 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 😀

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