Difference between revisions of "Remember/Know"

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(Basic Characteristics)
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* Description
 
* Description
 
The Remember/Know paradigm distinguishes between the recollection of a memory, known as remembering, and the familiarity of a memory, known as knowing. Subjects are given a recognition test by showing them a list of words and then a specific time later they are asked whether they remember the word (R) or whether they just knew that that the word had been presented to them in the past (K). Remembering is considered one’s concrete awareness of oneself in the past and knowing is considered one’s abstract knowledge of the past. This distinction correlates with the distinction of the [[Declarative Memory]] which is split into the [[Episodic Memory]] and the [[Semantic Memory]]. Episodic remembering is the retrieval of personal temporary dates and self-relevant facts. Semantic knowing, on the other hand, is the retrieval of impersonal, undated, and world-relevant facts.   
 
The Remember/Know paradigm distinguishes between the recollection of a memory, known as remembering, and the familiarity of a memory, known as knowing. Subjects are given a recognition test by showing them a list of words and then a specific time later they are asked whether they remember the word (R) or whether they just knew that that the word had been presented to them in the past (K). Remembering is considered one’s concrete awareness of oneself in the past and knowing is considered one’s abstract knowledge of the past. This distinction correlates with the distinction of the [[Declarative Memory]] which is split into the [[Episodic Memory]] and the [[Semantic Memory]]. Episodic remembering is the retrieval of personal temporary dates and self-relevant facts. Semantic knowing, on the other hand, is the retrieval of impersonal, undated, and world-relevant facts.   
 +
 
* History
 
* History
 +
 +
The Remember/Know paradigm was inspired by Endel Tulving’s theories in the mid eighties. Tulving distinguished between two quite different recollective experiences: of remembering and knowing. John Gardiner then in the late eighties further developed the distinction between remembering and knowing. Gardiner further describes developments in the remember/know paradigm with not only the difference between [[Declarative Memory]], but also the difference between remembering which reflects the [[explicit memory]] and knowing which reflects the [[implicit memory]]. Further studies are still trying to understand the distinction between remembering and knowing. 
  
 
* References
 
* References

Revision as of 14:40, 27 June 2008


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Remember/Know

Basic Characteristics

  • Description

The Remember/Know paradigm distinguishes between the recollection of a memory, known as remembering, and the familiarity of a memory, known as knowing. Subjects are given a recognition test by showing them a list of words and then a specific time later they are asked whether they remember the word (R) or whether they just knew that that the word had been presented to them in the past (K). Remembering is considered one’s concrete awareness of oneself in the past and knowing is considered one’s abstract knowledge of the past. This distinction correlates with the distinction of the Declarative Memory which is split into the Episodic Memory and the Semantic Memory. Episodic remembering is the retrieval of personal temporary dates and self-relevant facts. Semantic knowing, on the other hand, is the retrieval of impersonal, undated, and world-relevant facts.

  • History

The Remember/Know paradigm was inspired by Endel Tulving’s theories in the mid eighties. Tulving distinguished between two quite different recollective experiences: of remembering and knowing. John Gardiner then in the late eighties further developed the distinction between remembering and knowing. Gardiner further describes developments in the remember/know paradigm with not only the difference between Declarative Memory, but also the difference between remembering which reflects the explicit memory and knowing which reflects the implicit memory. Further studies are still trying to understand the distinction between remembering and knowing.

  • References

Knowlton and Squire, 1995. Remembering and Knowing: two different expressions of declarative memory. PMID 7602267

Tulving E, 2001. Episodic memory and common sense: how far apart? PMID 11571040

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