Memory
performance is superior when the information is studied and retrieved in the
same environment. Explain how encoding-specificity theory
and context-dependent memory explain this finding AND how these theories
differ. 0% plagurism
The brain can recall facts
easily, based on the environment within which the brain receives and processes
information. The encoding-specificity and context-dependent memory theories
explain the brain's ability to recall based on surroundings and their
relationship with the recalled information. Therefore, through the
encoding-specificity and context-dependent memory theories, we can prove that
memory performance is optimal when facts are obtained in the same environment
they are recalled.