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{{technical|date=November 2016}}
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'''Visual learning''' is
==Techniques==
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==Areas of the brain affected==
Various areas of the [[brain]] work together in many ways to produce the images that we see with our eyes and encoded by our brains. The basis of this work takes place in the [[visual cortex]] of the brain. The visual cortex is located in the [[occipital lobe]] of the brain and harbors many other structures that aid in [[Object recognition (cognitive science)|visual recognition]], categorization, and learning. One of the first things the brain must do when acquiring new visual information is to recognize it. Brain areas involved in recognition are the
After recognizing and categorizing new material entered into the [[visual field]], the brain is ready to begin the [[Encoding (memory)|encoding]] process – the process that leads to learning. Multiple brain areas are involved in this process such as the [[frontal lobe]], the right [[extrastriate cortex]], the [[neocortex]], and again, the [[neostriatum]]. One area in particular, the [[limbic]]-diencephalic region, is essential for transforming perceptions into memories.<ref>Squire, L. "Declarative and Nondeclarative Memory: Multiple Brain Systems Supporting Learning and Memory". 1992 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. ''Journal of Cognitive Neuroscience'' 4.3.</ref> With the coming together of tasks of recognition, categorization, and learning; [[schema (psychology)|schema]]s help make the process of encoding new information and relating it to things you already know much easier. One can remember visual images much better when applying them to an already-known schema. Schemas provide enhancement of [[visual memory]] and learning.<ref>Lord, C. "Schemas and Images as Memory Aids: Two Modes of Processing Social Information". Stanford University. 1980. American Psychological Association.</ref>
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** [[Auditory learning]]
** [[Kinesthetic learning]]
* [[Filmstrip]]
* [[Slide show]]
==References==
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