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Generic Zyban (Bupropion, Zyban® equivalent)
Zyban is a quit smoking aid. It's a proven results medication, used to reduce the severity of nicotine cravings and withdrawal symptoms while Smoking cessation. It shows 73% success rate after a seven-week treatment, and allows one to quit smoking easier. Other uses for this medications are as anti depressant, Sexual dysfunction treatment, Obesity, ADHD, Parkinson and other
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150mg
| Quantity | Price | Price per pill | Returning customer price | Bonus | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 30 | $ 94.00 | $ 3.13 | $ 84.00 | ---- | Add to cart |
Drug Medical Information
AGE AND BEHAVIOR: MEMORY THEORY – LONG-TERM MEMORY - AGE OF SUBJECT AND AGE OF MEMORY CONFOUNDED
To study age effects it is ideal to keep the age of memories the same among people of different age groups. Thus, the memory of the death of President Kennedy dates from 1963 for people of all ages who noted the event at that time. However, not all studies lend themselves to keeping separate the age of the memory and the age of the person holding this memory. Such studies are sources of interesting information, nevertheless, as can be seen in the study by Bahrick, Bahrick, and Wittlinger (1975).
They tested high school graduates ranging in age from 17 to 74 years. These adults had graduated from high school as recently as 3-4 months prior to the study and as long ago as 47-48 years. They were tested for memory of the names and faces of their classmates from the high school yearbooks.
A variety of tests were made but only two will be discussed here—the other tests will be discussed in the next chapter when the difference between recall and recognition memory is examined. The two tests were the recall of names and the recall of faces. Very simply, the subjects were asked to list all the names of class members that they could. For faces, the subjects were presented with portraits and had to write the appropriate names.
Not unexpectedly, perhaps, recall of both names and names associated with faces declined with time. From 3-4 years after high school graduation to 47-48 years after graduation, recall of names declined 60 percent and recall of names associated with faces declined more than 70 percent. The point here is simply that recall functions do decline over time; perhaps the information was not well processed in the first place, as evidenced by the fact that even those newly graduated (3-4 months) could recall only 15 percent of the names.
The decline in recall functions over time might suggest a decline with age in long-term memory, contrary to the conclusions of Botwinick and Storandt. It is crucial to emphasize, however, that in the study by Bahrick et al., the age of the memory was confounded with the age of the subject—the older people were out of high school longer and thus the memories were older. One, or both of these together (age of memory and age of person), may have contributed to this decline in recall.
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