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Personal Access to Knowledge - Coggle Diagram
Personal Access to Knowledge
Storing Knowledge
Books, Files
Websites
Brain
Memory
Every time we remember a memory, that memory is reconstructed
Declarative Memories: Explicit memories that we can consciously recall
Semantic Memories (memories of fact)
Episodic Memories (memories from your own life)
Non-declarative Memories are implicit procedural memories that we cannot consciously recall, but that we can nevertheless perform
Illusions
"The Truth" (you only move closer to it)
We have to experience new things or access someone else's experiences in order to develop knowledge.
Forgetfulness
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Misattribution: to give credit to the wrong person or source whether deliberately or mistakenly
Blocking: When there is an obstruction to your ability to recall information.
Absent-mindedness: Inattentiveness that leads to lack of memory
Information
.
Misinformation: incorrect information, unintentionally false information
Fake News: false, often sensational stories, spread under the guise of news reporting
Disinformation: intentionally false or inaccurate information spread as an act of deception
.
Confirmation Biases: the fact that people are more likely to accept or notice information if it appears to support what they already believe or expect
Propaganda: information or ideas that are spread by an organized group or government to influence people’s opinions, esp. by not giving all the facts or by secretly emphasizing only one way of looking at the facts