Examples of retroactive interference in the following topics:
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- Transience is caused by proactive and retroactive interference.
- Proactive interference is when old information inhibits the ability to remember new information, such as when outdated scientific facts interfere with the ability to remember updated facts.
- Retroactive interference is when new information inhibits the ability to remember old information, such as when hearing recent news figures, then trying to remember earlier facts and figures.
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- Interference occurs in memory when there is an interaction between the new material being learned and previously learned material.
- There are two main kinds of interference: proactive and retroactive.
- Proactive interference is the forgetting of information due to interference from previous knowledge in LTM.
- Retroactive interference occurs when newly learned information interferes with the encoding or recall of previously learned information.
- This is due to retroactive interference.
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- Under interference theory, transience occurs because all memories interfere with the ability to recall other memories.
- Proactive and retroactive interference can impact how well we are able to recall a memory, and sometimes cause us to forget things permanently.
- In this type of interference, old information inhibits the ability to remember new information, such as when outdated scientific facts interfere with the ability to remember updated facts.
- Retroactive interference occurs when old memories are changed by new ones, sometimes so much that the original memory is forgotten.
- This is known as proactive and retroactive interference.
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- Transience is caused by proactive and retroactive interference.
- Proactive interference is when old information inhibits the ability to remember new information, such as preconceived notions, or changes in historical or scientific facts over time.
- Retroactive interference is when new information inhibits the ability to remember old information, such as when hearing recent news figures, then trying to remember earlier facts and figures.
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- The government pardoned them and restored their records to show honorable discharges but did not provide retroactive compensation.
- Wilson did not interfere with the well-established system of Jim Crow, and acquiesced to the demands of southern Democrats that their states be left alone to deal with issues of race and black voting without interference from Washington.
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- Feeling the future: Experimental evidence for anomalous retroactive influences on cognition and affect.
- C. (2012) Failing the Future: Three Unsuccessful Attempts to Replicate Bem's 'Retroactive Facilitation of Recall' Effect.
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- Interference occurs when multiple waves interact with each other, and is a change in amplitude caused by several waves meeting.
- Interference usually refers to the interaction of waves that are correlated or coherent with each other (i.e, "interfere" with each other), either because they come from the same source or because they have the same or nearly the same frequency.
- Interference can be constructive or destructive.
- An example of constructive interference may be seen in .
- An example of destructive interference can be seen in .
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- Interference is a phenomenon in which two waves superimpose to form a resultant wave of greater or lesser amplitude.
- Interference is a phenomenon in which two waves superimpose to form a resultant wave of greater or lesser amplitude.
- Destructive interference occurs when the crest of one wave meets a trough of another wave.
- Examples of constructive and destructive interference are shown in .
- Destructive interference occurs when the waves are half a cycle out of phase, or
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- A wave may have a complicated shape that can result from superposition and interference of several waves.
- As a result of superposition of waves, interference can be observed.
- Interference is an effect caused by two or more waves .
- This superposition produces pure constructive interference.
- A brief introduction to constructive and destructive wave interference and the principle of superposition.
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- Interference microscopy is a variation of phase-contrast microscopy that uses a prism to split a light beam in two.
- Interference microscopy uses a prism to split light into two slightly diverging beams that then pass through the specimen.
- Interference occurs when a light beam is retarded or advanced relative to the other.
- There are three types of interference microscopy: classical, differential contrast, and fluorescence contrast.
- When the two beams pass through the same material across the specimen they produce no interference.