The relationship between our cognitive organization and memory is a complex one, but it breaks down into three components:
•Conceptual structure: the mental representation we have of relationships and principles. For example, we know that mom gives us dinner, and we also know we can’t fit inside a shoe box.
•Process: the creation of relationships. We learn that if we are good, mom gives us a treat.
•Product: a set of identifiable relationships among organized objects or ideas. For example, we know what cutlery is for (specific uses of a knife and fork), or we learn how to get rewards for specific behaviors.
This automatic organization, in normal developing persons, serves to help us start on the learning process. We are then able to take skills learned from experiences and apply them to novel yet similar situations. From the relationship with our parents, we determine the role of adults in our lives, and we then apply our experiences to other situations or experiences. For example, we know that we can’t fit inside a shoe box, so we can apply that fact to reason that the family car does not fit in the fridge.
Although this might seem like a rather fatuous example, for many children with an impairment in their prefrontal cortical development, it is not. Imagine if it were not obvious to you that you could not fit inside a shoe box. Imagine if you could not make the connection between rewards for good behavior and admonishments for bad behavior?
Posted on
Mon, August 15, 2011
by Dr. Karina Poirier
filed under