翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Recommendation letter
・ Recommended exposure limit
・ Recommended maximum intake of alcoholic beverages
・ Recommended precaution
・ Recommended Records
・ Recognised Independent Centre
・ Recognising and Recording Progress and Achievement
・ Recognition
・ Recognition (EP)
・ Recognition (parliamentary procedure)
・ Recognition (sociology)
・ Recognition (tax)
・ Recognition and Prevention Program
・ Recognition failure of recallable words
・ Recognition heuristic
Recognition memory
・ Recognition of Customary Marriages Act, 1998
・ Recognition of Excellence in Design
・ Recognition of marital rape in Pakistani law
・ Recognition of Native American sacred sites in the United States
・ Recognition of prior learning
・ Recognition of same-sex unions in Albania
・ Recognition of same-sex unions in Andorra
・ Recognition of same-sex unions in Australia
・ Recognition of same-sex unions in Austria
・ Recognition of same-sex unions in Bulgaria
・ Recognition of same-sex unions in Chile
・ Recognition of same-sex unions in China
・ Recognition of same-sex unions in Colombia
・ Recognition of same-sex unions in Colorado


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Recognition memory : ウィキペディア英語版
Recognition memory
Recognition memory is a subcategory of declarative memory.〔Medina, J. J. (2008). (The biology of recognition memory ). ''Psychiatric Times''.〕 Essentially, recognition memory is the ability to recognize previously encountered events, objects, or people. When the previously experienced event is reexperienced, this environmental content is matched to stored memory representations, eliciting matching signals.〔(Norman & O'Reilly, 2003)〕
Recognition memory can be subdivided into two component processes: recollection and familiarity, sometimes referred to as "remembering" and "knowing", respectively.〔Medina, J. J. (2008). The biology of recognition memory. Psychiatric Times. Retrieved March 14, 2009, from http://www.brainrules.net/pdf/JohnMedina_PsychTimes_June08.pdf〕 Recollection is the retrieval of details associated with the previously experienced event. In contrast, familiarity is the feeling that the event was previously experienced, without recollection. Thus, the fundamental distinction between the two processes is that recollection is a slow, controlled search process, whereas familiarity is a fast, automatic process.〔
Mandler's "Butcher-on-the-bus" example:〔
Imagine taking a seat on a crowded bus. You look to your left and notice a man. Immediately, you are overcome with this sense that you've seen this man before, but you cannot remember who he is. This automatically elicited feeling is familiarity. While trying to remember who this man is, you begin retrieving specific details about your previous encounter. For example, you might remember that this man handed you a fine chop of meat in the grocery store. Or perhaps you remember him wearing an apron. This search process is recollection.
== Historical overview ==

The phenomenon of familiarity and recognition has long been described in books and poems. Within the field of Psychology, recognition memory was first alluded to by Wilhelm Wundt in his concept of ''know-againness'' or ''assimilation'' of a former memory image to a new one. The first formal attempt to describe recognition was by the English Doctor Arthur Wigan in his book “Duality of the Mind.” Here he describes the feelings of familiarity we experience as being due to the brain being a double organ. In essence we perceive things with one half of our brain and if they somehow get lost in translation to the other side of the brain this causes the feeling of recognition when we again see said object, person etc. However, he incorrectly assumed that these feelings occur only when the mind is exhausted (from hunger, lack of sleep etc.). His description, though elementary compared to current knowledge, set the groundwork and sparked interest in this topic for subsequent researchers. Arthur Allin (1896) was the first person to publish an article attempting to explicitly define and differentiate between subjective and objective definitions of the experience of recognition although his findings are based mostly on introspections. Allin corrects Wigan’s notion of the exhausted mind by asserting that this half-dream state is not the process of recognition.〔 He rather briefly refers to the physiological correlates of this mechanism as having to do with the cortex but does not go into detail as to where these substrates are located.〔 His objective explanation of the lack of recognition is when a person observes an object for a second time and experiences the feeling of familiarity that they experienced this object at a previous time.〔 Woodsworth (1913) and Margaret and Edward Strong (1916) were the first people to experimentally use and record findings employing the delayed matching to sample task to analyze recognition memory. Following this Benton Underwood was the first person to analyze the concept of recognition errors in relation to words in 1969. He deciphered that these recognition errors occur when words have similar attributes.〔Dr. Dewey. ("Recognition Errors" ) in ''Introduction to Psychology''. intropsych.com〕 Next came attempts to determine the upper limits of recognition memory, a task that Standing (1973) endeavored. He determined that the capacity for pictures is almost limitless.〔Dr. Dewey. (The Almost Limitless Capacity of Recognition Memory ). in ''Introduction to Psychology''. intropsych.com〕 In 1980 George Mandler introduced the recollection-familiarity distinction, more formally known as the dual process theory〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Recognition memory」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.