Auditory Memory

What Are the Causes of Auditory Memory Problems in Children?

Auditory memory is the ability to not only understand and process information presented orally, but also to recall it when needed. In many children with auditory memory problems, the root cause is in the processing phase. Children may not be able...

Auditory Memory Games for Kids

Those with weak auditory memory struggle to absorb and recall information they hear. Children with this problem often have a hard time learning, educational therapist Addie Cusimano writes for the Audiblox website. Parents and teachers can play...

Exercises to Teach Listening Skills

Listening skills are vital to school and career success, and yet most people receive very little instruction in the subject. Michael Opitz, professor of reading at the University of Northern Colorado, and Matthew Zbaracki, Assistant Professor of...

4 Ways to Teach Dyslexics

Research shows that dyslexic kids who learn by using all of their senses (visual, auditory, tactile and kinesthetic) are better able to store and retrieve information. Teach your child to see the letter "a," say its name and sound, and write it...

Exercises for Memory Loss in Stroke Patients

Each stroke leaves its marks, and often memory loss is one of them. Depending on the area of the brain affected by stroke and the extent of damage, impaired memory impacts daily living in various ways. On the bright side, we know that new memories...

Activities to Help Children With Short-Term Memory

Short-term memory lasts from a few seconds to a minute, with exact times varying with each person. When you are trying to remember a name that was just mentioned, or recall a number on a license plate that just passed, you are using your...

Language Development in Blind Children

The development of a strong vocabulary is the foundation for success in higher learning, but a blind child faces special language acquisition challenges, according to the Texas School for the Blind and Visually Impaired. She needs early and...

Activities for People With Sequential Memory Problems

Sequential memory is the ability to distinguish and recall items in a particular order, according to the website Audiblox. Sequential memory is both auditory, or sound-based, and visual. People with dyslexia and some people with brain injuries or...

How to Help Kids with Visual Memory Problems

Visual memory is the function of memory that allows you to successfully turn images into pictures in your mind to reserve and recall later. Unfortunately, children that suffer from various visual processing disorders may also have visual memory...

What Are the Three Major Parts of the Brain?

The brain is made up of several compartments; however, there are three main parts of the brain. The three main partitions are the cerebrum, cerebellum and brain stem, according to Thinkquest.org. Each section controls different things in the body...

How Short-Term Memory Works

Short-term memory, which is one of three types of memory, holds a limited amount of information for a few seconds and is the step before long-term memory. According to the Georgia Tech College of Computing, short-term memory gets its information...

What Is CFIT Exercise?

CFIT exercise is one of the components of the Cognitive Fitness and Innovative Therapies center in Santa Barbara, California, the first comprehensive "cognitive shop" in America that focuses on improving memory for Alzheimer's patients and people...

Nutrients for the Temporal Lobe

Your temporal lobes are located on the left and right sides of your brain, extending from beneath your temple toward the back of your head. The lobes contain billions of brain cells, including nerve networks important to visual processing,...

Children & Memory Problems

Children and adolescents are instructed to learn a massive amount of information in order to prepare them for life after school. While this may be standard and simple for some children, many others experience learning disabilities due to memory...

Cognitive Problems With Bipolar

Characterized by symptoms of mania--an abnormally high mood--and depression--an abnormally low mood--bipolar disorder affects about 2.6 percent of the adult U.S. population, according to the National Institute of Mental Health. During manic...

Higher Brain Functions

The cerebrum houses the four major brain regions responsible for higher functioning. According to the Center for Neuro Skills, these four regions include the frontal lobes, parietal lobe, occipital lobe and the temporal lobe. The cerebrum is also...

Brain Hemisphere Functions

The brain is divided vertically from front to back. While appearing like mirror images, there is some functional division between the lobes. These divisions are not absolute. In some people, the functions are reversed from side to side, while in...

The Link Between Vitamin B-12 & Tinnitus

A lack of vitamins, including vitamin B-12, can cause a variety of health problems. One symptom that is occasionally linked with vitamin B-12 deficiencies is tinnitus -- a ringing in the ears. If you suffer from tinnitus, taking vitamin B-12...

Classifications of Epileptic Seizures

Epilepsy, also called seizure disorder, describes a condition of recurrent unprovoked seizures. Seizures occur when nerves on the brain produce a sudden and strong surge of electrical impulses. Unprovoked seizures include those that occur without...

The Brain's Main Functions

The human brain is part of the body’s central nervous system; in conjunction with the spinal cord and nerves, it controls everything that the body does. The main functions of the brain are controlled by three of the brain structures: the...

About Learning Style

When you are learning new information, you may prefer to see visual diagrams or a demonstration. Or, you may want someone to tell you how to do something, rather than show you. You may even have to do a task yourself to really understand it. The...

Alzheimer's Later Stages

Alzheimer's disease is a degenerative brain disease that causes progressive memory loss, neurological and cognitive impairment, and motor dysfunction over a period of years. It progresses in stages, with symptoms becoming more severe and...

The Five Senses of Reminiscence Therapy

Reminiscence therapy is a sensory memory-based approach to psychotherapy that is widespread in the treatment of elderly patients with dementia and Alzheimer's disease. It is also used for patients who suffer from brain and nervous system damage....

Medical Conditions That Cause Hallucinations

Hallucinations are waking sensory representations of information that does not exist. They usually involve seeing, hearing or felling things that are not present, although smells and tastes may also be hallucinated. According to a fact sheet...

The Brain Functions Involved in Cognitive Functions

While the various parts of the brain have been observed to have discreet functions for processing specific types of information, the process of thought, or cognition, uses a neural network of interconnections between separate areas. A region of...

Brain Structures & Functions

According to Harvard professor Dr. J. Kimball, there are approximately one-hundred-billion neurons in the brain, and each one can have about ten thousand connections. That results in major complexity. However, the brain has several ridges,...