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  2. Flashback (psychology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flashback_(psychology)

    Out of the three types of memory processes, long-term memory contains the greatest amount of memory storage and is involved in most of the cognitive processes. According to Rasmuseen and Berntsen, "long-term memory processes may form the core of spontaneous thought" (2009). [18] Thus, the memory process most related to flashbacks is long term ...

  3. Memory disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_disorder

    Epidemiological studies have shown an increase in mental health cases globally. In 2050, there could be a pandemic of neurological diseases. [39] An aging baby-boom population increases the demand for mental health care. Western culture's gauge of mental illness is determinate on level of dangerousness, competence, and responsibility. [40]

  4. Mental management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mental_management

    Retrieval is the final stage of memory, after encoding and retention." [5] These associated stages are dealt with on an implicit basis in mental management. Retrieval is distinguished by La Garanderie as the gesture of memorisation, which involves bringing back evocations for the purpose of reproducing them in the short-, medium-, and long-term ...

  5. Memory and retention in learning - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_and_Retention_in...

    Types of Long-term Memory. Long-term memory is the site for which information such as facts, physical skills and abilities, procedures and semantic material are stored. Long-term memory is important for the retention of learned information, allowing for a genuine understanding and meaning of ideas and concepts. [6]

  6. Long-term memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Long-term_memory

    A representation of that rapidly decaying memory is moved to short-term memory. Short-term memory does not have a large capacity like sensory memory but holds information for seconds or minutes. The final storage is long-term memory, which has a very large capacity and is capable of holding information possibly for a lifetime. [2]

  7. Forgetting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forgetting

    Information in the first stage, sensory memory, is forgotten after only a few seconds. In the second stage, short-term memory, information is forgotten after about 20 years. While information in long-term memory can be remembered for minutes or even decades, it may be forgotten when the retrieval processes for that information fail. [5]

  8. Cognitive disorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_disorder

    Difficulty creating recent term memories is called anterograde amnesia and is caused by damage to the hippocampus part of the brain, which is a major part of the memory process. [8] Retrograde amnesia is also caused by damage to the hippocampus, but the memories that were encoded or in the process of being encoded in long-term memory are erased [8]

  9. Memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory

    Research has suggested that long-term memory storage in humans may be maintained by DNA methylation, [35] and the 'prion' gene. [36] [37] Further research investigated the molecular basis for long-term memory. By 2015 it had become clear that long-term memory requires gene transcription activation and de novo protein synthesis. [38]