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Stress has a very large impact on the formation of declarative memories.
These results indicate the role of sleep on declarative memory formation.
A side effect of the primer is severe declarative memory loss.
A declarative memory was formed in phase 1 if the words shown to participants were remembered.
This demonstrates the involvement of the hippocampus in declarative memory.
It is believed that sleep plays an active role in consolidation of declarative memory.
Declarative memory uses a top down processing method that is not recalled by stimulus.
There are two types of declarative memory: episodic and semantic.
There were signs of decreased declarative memory performance in the participants that had to complete the stressful situation after learning the words.
The hippocampal areas are important to semantic memory's involvement with declarative memory.
The relationship between sleep spindles and declarative memory consolidation is not yet fully understood.
The rats' use of specific events, cues and places are all forms of declarative memory.
Declarative memory has also been shown to benefit from sleep, but not in the same way as procedural memory.
This model separates declarative memory and production memory into separate functions.
Together, semantic and episodic memory make up our declarative memory.
Declarative memory requires conscious recall, in that some conscious process must call back the information.
On repeated practice, these procedures develop into production rules that the individual can use to solve the problem, without accessing long-term declarative memory.
These findings strongly suggest that procedural memory is completely independent from declarative memory.
Explicit memory/Declarative memory refers to all memories that are consciously available.
Declarative memory is the memory for conscious events.
The theory says that explicit memories are associated with a declarative memory system which is responsible for the formation of new representations or data structures.
Eyewitnesses use declarative memories, specifically episodic memory when they are asked to recall specific events that took place in the past.
The difference between procedural and declarative memory systems was first explored and understood with simple semantics.
There are two ways to learn a telephone number: memorize it using your declarative memory, or use it many times to create a habit.
It is known to be important for the storage and processing of declarative memory, which allows for factual recall.