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Sci-Tech Dictionary:

decay theory

(di′kā ′thē·ə·rē)

(psychology) A model of forgetting which assumes that memories fade and will gradually be lost if they are not occasionally refreshed.


 
 

A theory of loss of learning of motor skills based on the premise that engrams storing the motor patterns required for the performance of a motor skill deteriorate when they are not activated.

 
Medical Dictionary: decay theory

n.

The theory of memory loss that holds that an engram deteriorates progressively with time during the interval when it is not activated.

 
Wikipedia: Decay theory

The Decay theory states that when something new is learned, a neurochemical "memory trace" is formed, but over time this trace tends to disintegrate, unless it is occassionaly used.

Decay theory suggests that the passage of time always increases forgetting. However there is one circumstance where old memories can be stronger than more recent ones. Older memories are sometimes more resistant to shocks or physical assaults on the brain than recent memories.

The decay theory along with the interference theory, motivated forgetting and retrieval failure theory are four suggested reasons why people forget. Decay alone, although it may play some role, cannot entirely explain lapses in long-term memory. A trace is formed by sensory neurones -- this trace is a memory. When a person forgets, the trace is lost.

Another theory of forgetting in short-term memory, or STM, is the Displacement Theory which suggests that new memory traces displace or erase old ones.


 
 

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