Remembering and Forgetting is the ninth program in the DISCOVERING PSYCHOLOGY series. This program looks at the complexity of memory: how images, ideas, language, physical actions, even sounds and smells are translated into codes that are represented in the memory and retrieved as needed.
www.learner.org/discoveringpsychology/09/e09expand.html
Forgetting: the Relentless Foe ... Causes of Forgetting ... Remembering what you have heard is usually more difficult than remembering what you have read.
www.siue.edu/SPIN/forget.html www.siue.edu/SPIN/forget.html
memory, Remembering and Forgetting: Information stored in memory can be tapped in a number of ways. Memory recall or retrieval is the ability to retrieve or reproduce learned material. Recognition is the ability simply to identify material that has been encountered before. ... Page 2 of 3; Remembering and Forgetting...
kids.britannica.com/comptons/article-204490/memory kids.britannica.com/comptons/article-204490/memory
A close reading of Benjamin's essay directs us to the difference between remembering and forgetting specifically as the discrepancy between the presence and the absence of the self. ... Remembering and forgetting are forever a place of intertwining, a crossroad, a junction.
www.wbenjamin.org/remembering.html www.wbenjamin.org/remembering.html
Forgetting is a vital brain function ... Forgetting is a vital brain function ... Those who could most often summon the target pairs were also the worst at remembering the others, suggesting that they were better at unconsciously filtering out unwanted memories.
www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=forgetting-to... www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=forgetting-to-remember
What did they do: Looked at memories for an experienced and a never-experienced medical procedure ... "identify how age and delay influence children’s long-term memory and investigate whether typical childhood amnesia effects would emerge" (237) ... Why, what, huh? Because they claim there is not enough research on...
www.uark.edu/misc/lampinen/read/quas99.htm
It is thought however, that some forgetting does indeed occur. It appears that we remember skills longer than we remember ... Is the truth then, that things are forgotten or is it that access is denied but the memory is still there. How could we know which of these applies to our failed attempts at remembering something?
www.akri.org/cognition/learfor.htm
Home > News > Columnists > Arvind Lavakare; Remembering and forgetting; March 21, 2003; ... why, even the Security Council will be a mere spectator after being declared as 'irrelevant' by what Newsweek recently labeled the 'Arrogant Empire.' It's an event truly worth remembering, not forgetting.
www.rediff.com/news/2003/mar/21arvind.htm
But at the same time, forgetting can be a useful process for personal and social growth. Forgetting allows us a new start, to protect private identities or reinvent those identities.
sjlibrarian.wordpress.com/2007/11/23/blogging-rememberi... sjlibrarian.wordpress.com/2007/11/23/blogging-remembering-and-forgetting/
Tragedies happen, people mourn, and then they move on, perhaps because constantly remembering is too depressing. I mean, when was the last time you heard the name Mike Darr? Or Mike Sharperson? Anyway, nice article by Plaschke.
dodgerthoughts.baseballtoaster.com/archives/635701.html