When we recall information, we have experienced or learned we are  performing a mental activity referred to as "memory." Five important  areas of the brain are utilized when we form memory. They are the  hippocampus, amygdale, cerebral cortex, and neurons. The hippocampus  lies deep within the brain. It plays the largest role in storing  information as memory.
The amygdale is located near the  hippocampus. It takes emotion and marks the memory using the emotion.  The outer layer of the brain is the cerebral cortex. Depending on  whether the memory process utilizes language, senses, or problem  solving, the cerebral cortex stores long term memory in the appropriate  zone. Neurons are a communication network within the brain that promotes  memory. They become active through brain chemicals called  neurotransmitters.
Two Basic Categories of Memory
A simple example of "short term memory" is dialing a phone number that someone just told you. Your mind stores the number for a few seconds or minutes until you dial the phone. An example of "long term memory" is making a specific conscious or unconscious effort to retain information for a purpose, such a test or a certain procedure for a job.
A simple example of "short term memory" is dialing a phone number that someone just told you. Your mind stores the number for a few seconds or minutes until you dial the phone. An example of "long term memory" is making a specific conscious or unconscious effort to retain information for a purpose, such a test or a certain procedure for a job.
Three Stages of Forming and Maintaining Memory
The three stages the brain experiences when a person forms memories are Acquisition, Consolidation, and Retrieval.
The three stages the brain experiences when a person forms memories are Acquisition, Consolidation, and Retrieval.
When  a mother complains to her child that they "are not paying attention,"  the child is probably not focusing. In order for the Acquisition stage  to take place, the child must concentrate intently on what his mother is  telling him for at least eight seconds. The information enters the  child's brain and be escorted along pathways by neurons to the  appropriate spot of the brain.
Consolidation occurs after the  child has concentrated enough to encode new information. Then, the  hippocampus signals the information to be stored as long-term memory in  the brain.
Retrieval occurs when the child needs to remember what  his mother told him. His brain will then activate the same nerve cells  it used to retain the information.
Exercise Your Brain
Just  like anything else you try to improve on, the more you practice, the  better you get. The same goes for the brain. The more you exercise it,  the better processor you become. One easy way to do this is to change  your routine in some way. If you always load the dishwasher with your  right hand, use your left hand. Another way would be to take a class in  something you know very little about. Alternatively, you could follow  some new recipes for this week's dinner menu.
Tips to Improve Memory
Stop multitasking! Use the complete eight necessary seconds it takes to encode information into your brain.
If you learn better by listening, record information and listen to it until you remember it.
If you learn visually, look at the information and recite what you want to remember.
When  dealing with complex subjects, work to understand the basic concepts  rather than focus too much on the details. Be able to tell them to  someone in your own words.
"Over learn" information over a period of time rather than trying to squeeze the learning into a short period.
Relate new information to previous knowledge and build on it.
Use words and pictures when taking notes, and write things down in datebooks and calendars.
Set up success in your brain. Tell yourself you want to learn the information and that you can learn the information.
Mnemonic Devices to Help Memory
If  you have ever used a visual image, a sentence, or a word to help you  remember something, you have used a mnemonic device. People use helpful  mnemonic devices every day without even realizing it. For example, if  you think of a rose to remember your new neighbor's name as "Rosie," you  are using a "visual image." You might also use a sentence such as "Dad  made Sally bring raisins," using the first letter of each word to  represent the steps in long division; divide, multiply, subtract, bring  down, repeat.
Another mnemonic device is the use of acronyms. The  organization "MADD," for "Mothers against Drunk Driving,'' is an example  of an acronym. Putting information together with rhyming is another  method. Some people like to use joke to put information together because  they find them easy to remember. Finally, "chunking" is found to be  helpful. Grouping long lists of information into smaller, easier to  remember categories has proven to be a reliable mnemonic device as well.
 
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