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Module 6 - Coggle Diagram
Module 6
Multiple Memory Systems
Declarative memory, also known as explicit memory, is a type of long-term memory that involves conscious recall.
Declarative memory can also be called Explicit memory. It is a part of two symptoms called semantic memory and episodic memory.
Declarative memory can also be called Semantic memory also helps with remembering facts and remembering basic knowledge and episodic memory helps with remembering a person's favorite or worse times in their life.
Procedural memory is a part of the implicit long-term memory responsible for knowing how to do things.
Procedural memory is a long-term memory category involving recollections of which a person has no direct conscious awareness. It can only be demonstrated indirectly through motor action
Procedural memory helps people do everyday activities or routines without them having to stop and think about the next move to take.
Memory and Amnesia
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Amnesia is another word for memory loss, this can be caused by personal trauma, body or brain trauma, or mental trauma.
Anterograde amnesia is when the person cannot obtain new memories after receiving any type of trauma to the brain. When the hippocampus is damaged then there is no way, it can receive new memory.
Retrograde amnesia is when the person loses memory they have had for years upon years. This happens before any trauma has happened to them. You will see this type of memory loss with people who have suffered from a stroke or nervous system diseases.
Transient global amnesia is when the person loses their memory really fast, and it lasts for a temporary time. This can cause them to lose old memories and new memories, but it will only last for a few hours no more than 24 hrs.
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