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AP Psych · Memory & cognition

Encoding in AP Psychology memory's first step.

Encoding is the first stage of memory — converting sensory input into a form the brain can store. The AP Psychology exam tests three encoding types in vignettes; this guide walks through each one with examples.

Updated May 2026Part of AP Psychology Definitions

What is encoding?

Encoding is the process of converting information from the outside world into a representation the brain can hold. It is the first of the three classical memory stages: encoding → storage → retrieval. If encoding fails, the memory was never formed, so retrieval has nothing to retrieve.

The AP exam usually presents a short vignette and asks you to label the encoding type being demonstrated. Memorize the three types AND a one-sentence example for each.

The three types of encoding

Visual encoding
Storing information based on its visual appearance. Example: remembering what a face looked like, but not what was said.
Acoustic encoding
Storing information based on its sound. Example: remembering a phone number by hearing yourself say the digits.
Semantic encoding
Storing information based on its meaning. Example: remembering the gist of a paragraph rather than the exact words. Semantic encoding produces the most durable memories.

How AP Psych tests encoding

MCQ stems almost always present a vignette and ask which encoding type is operating. Read for the modality clue: “the word’s sound” → acoustic; “the word’s meaning” → semantic; “the shape of the letters” → visual.

FRQs sometimes pair encoding with a related concept (levels of processing, depth of processing, the von Restorff effect). Always name the encoding type by name in your FRQ answer.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers — written by humans, not a chatbot.

Which encoding type produces the strongest memories?

Semantic encoding. Processing for meaning leaves deeper traces than processing for sound or shape — a finding called levels-of-processing theory (Craik & Lockhart, 1972).

Is encoding the same as attention?

Related but not identical. Attention is the filter that lets information into working memory. Encoding is what happens to it once it is there — specifically, how it is transformed for storage.

How can I improve encoding when studying for the AP exam?

Process material semantically rather than acoustically. Reading a definition aloud is acoustic. Explaining the concept in your own words to a friend is semantic — it sticks.

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