格式: rar 大小: 782.64K 时间: 2010-06-04 5125 ℃
Our goal in this chapter is to explain how you usually remember so much, and why you forget some of what you have known. We will explore how you get your everyday experiences into and out of memory.You will learn what psychology has discovered about different types of memories and about how those memories work. We hope that in the course of learning the many facts of memory, you will gain an appreciation for how wonderful memory is.
We can see these phenomena at work in even the very simple activity of dialing a phone number that, over time, has become highly familiar. At first, you probably had to think your way through each digit, one at a time.
Research on echoic memory has illustrated another important property of sensory memories: They are easily displaced by new information. If someone reads a list of words to you, each new word will displace the former word in echoic memory.
![]() |
111.57K |
![]() |
69.92K |
![]() |
1.88M |
![]() |
13.32K |
![]() |
33.43K |
![]() |
60.45K |
![]() |
294.94K |
![]() |
7.85M |
![]() |
4.55M |
![]() |
10.77M |
![]() |
6.27M |
![]() |
23.79M |
暂无回复