Psychologyspeaking topic
State-dependent memory: we recall something better when we return to the mood we learned it in. Is our internal state itself a retrieval cue?
— Bower, state-dependent memory
practice with this topic
Set the timer (5-30 min), take 20 seconds of prep if you like, start talking. Jot your thoughts onto the sticky-note board.
similar topics
- What happens when you discover that something you have done your whole life is wrong?
- Rationalization: not getting what we wanted and declaring 'I never wanted it anyway'. How fast does the mind work to justify what the heart already decided?
- The Romeo and Juliet effect: the more the families oppose a relationship, the more devoted the couple becomes. Does the obstacle genuinely deepen the love, or just fuel the defiance?
- In some languages, the 'my' in 'my mother' is a different word from the 'my' in 'my phone', because the grammar separates what can be taken from you from what can't. A mother is inalienable; a phone is not. If a language draws that line, do its speakers experience love and ownership differently than we do?
- Ainsworth's secure attachment: the child is upset when the mother leaves and soothed when she returns. Why do securely attached people worry less in their relationships?