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MEMORY

Discover the different processes involved in memory formation, storage, and retrieval. Explore concepts like attention, levels of processing, sensory memory, short-term memory, long-term memory, and retrieval cues.

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MEMORY

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  1. MEMORY You think it’s good? Well, you’re wrong.

  2. WHICH IS THE REAL PENNY?

  3. ENCODING • DEF: forming a memory code • Requires attention: focusing awareness on a narrowed range of stimuli or events • Attention is selective; acts as a filter

  4. LEVELS OF PROCESSING • Craik and Lockhart (1972) propose incoming info can be processed at different levels • 3 levels for verbal info.: • 1: Structural encoding: shallow processing that emphasizes the physical structure of the stimulus

  5. LEVELS OF PROCESSING CONTINUED • Phonemic encoding: emphasizes what a word sounds like • Semantic encoding: emphasizes meaning of verbal input; thinking about the objects and actions the word represents • Levels of Processing Theory: deeper levels of processing result in longer lasting memory codes

  6. ENRICHING ENCODING • Elaboration: linking a stimulus to other info at the time of encoding • Helps enhance semantic encoding • Involves thinking of examples to illustrate the idea

  7. VISUAL IMAGERY • Creating visual images to represent words to be remembered • Allan Paivio: easier to form images for concrete words • Dual-coding theory: holds that memory is enhanced by forming semantic and visual codes, since either can lead to recall

  8. SELF-REFERENT ENCODING • DEF: deciding how or whether info is personally relevant • It is easier to remember something if it is meaningful to you

  9. STORAGE: MAINTAINING INFORMATION IN MEMORY Storage is maintaining info in memory over time

  10. SENSORY MEMORY • DEF: preserves info in its original sensory form for a brief time, usually only a fraction of a second • Gives additional time to recognize stimulus • Visual and auditory memory trace decays after ¼ of a second

  11. SHORT-TERM MEMORY • STM is a limited-capacity store that can maintain unrehearsed info for up to 20 seconds • Rehearsal: process of repetitively verbalizing or thinking about the info

  12. DURABILITY OF STORAGE • Ability to recall decays considerably after only 15 seconds • This is due to time-related decay and interference from competing stimuli

  13. CAPACITY OF STORAGE • 1956: George Miller publishes “Magical Number 7” paper • Claims you can store 7 items (+ or – 2) in STM • You can increase capacity by Chunking: grouping familiar stimuli and storing as a single unit

  14. STM AS “WORKING Memory” • Alan Baddeley: “Working memory” consists of 3 parts: • 1: Phonological rehearsal loop(ex: reciting a phone #)—only 2 seconds of info • 2: Visuospatial sketchpad: allows to temporarily hold and manipulate visual images • 3: Executive control system: handles info as you engage in reasoning and decision making

  15. LONG-TERM MEMORY • DEF: an unlimited (virtually) capacity store that can hold info over lengthy periods of time

  16. LONG-TERM MEMORY PERMANENT? • Flash-bulb memories: unusually vivid and detailed recollections of momentous events • Hypnosis induced memories • ESB triggering long-lost memories

  17. STM AND LTM SEPARATE • Dominant thought today is that STM is a tiny and constantly changing portion of LTM

  18. HOW IS KNOWLEDGE REPRESENTED AND ORGANIZED IN MEMORY?

  19. CLUSTERING AND CONCEPTUAL HIERARCHIES • Clustering: tendency to remember similar or related items in a group • Conceptual hierarchy: multilevel classification system based on common properties among items

  20. SCHEMAS • Schema: an organized cluster of knowledge about a particular object or event abstracted from previous experience with the object or event

  21. SCRIPTS • Script: organizes what people know about common activities • A kind of schema

  22. SEMANTIC NETWORKS • DEF: consists of nodes representing concepts, joined together by pathways that link related concepts • Spreading activation: naturally thinking of related words

  23. CONNECTIONIST NETWORKS AND PARALLEL DISTRIBUTED PROCESSING (PDP) • PDP models assume that cognitive processes depend on patterns of activation in highly interconnected computational networks that resemble neural networks • PDP models assert that specific memories correspond to particular patterns of activation in these networks

  24. RETRIEVAL: GETTING INFORMATION OUT OF MEMORY

  25. TIP-OF-THE-TONGUE PHENOMENON • DEF: temporary inability to remember something you know, accompanied by the feeling that it’s just out of reach • Similar memories are interfering

  26. REINSTATING THE CONTEXT OF AN EVENT • Context cues facilitate the retrieval of info. • Remembering the origin of the thought

  27. RECONSTRUCTING MEMORIES AND MISINFORMATION EFFECT • Distortions in recall occur b/c subjects reconstruct a story to fit w/ their established schemas • Theories: overwriting, interference, and…

  28. SOURCE-MONITORING • Def: process of making attributions about the original memories • Source-monitoring error: when a memory derived from a source is misattributed to another source • Reality monitoring: process of deciding whether memories are based on external or internal sources

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