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Memory Construction

Memory Construction. We sometimes alter our memories as we encode or retrieve them. Your expectations, schemas, environment may alter your memories. Elizabeth Loftus. Schema. A schema is a set of beliefs or expectations about something based on past experience

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Memory Construction

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  1. Memory Construction • We sometimes alter our memories as we encode or retrieve them. • Your expectations, schemas, environment may alter your memories. • Elizabeth Loftus

  2. Schema • A schema is a set of beliefs or expectations about something based on past experience • Incoming information is fit with existing schemata • (concept maps) • Schemas can also influence the amount of attention paid to a given event

  3. The brain: • Looks for patterns • Tries to make meaning wherever it can (e.g. clouds, ceiling tiles, etc.)

  4. Misinformation Effect Leading Question: About how fast were the cars going when they smashed into each other?

  5. Memory Construction Examples • Remembering “sleep” • Overestimating first impressions • Underestimating earlier liking • Relating opinions to current state

  6. Eyewitness Testimony • Shown to be unreliable • People’s recall for events may be influenced by what they heard or constructed after the incident • Memory is reconstructed • Study after study has shown that there is no correlation between the subjective feeling of certainty one has about a memory, and the memory’s accuracy

  7. Special Topics in Memory • Eyewitness testimony cont’d • Elizabeth Loftus has shown subjects who are given false information about an event or scene tend to incorporate it into their memories, and "recall" the false information as a part of their original memory even two weeks later. • Loftus gives the example of the sniper attacks in the fall of 2002. "Everybody was looking for a white van even though the bad guys ended up having a dark Chevy Caprice." That's because some people reported seeing a white van at the scene of the crime. "Witnesses overhear each other," says Loftus, and police may also unintentionally influence people's memories when they talk about a crime.

  8. 1956 Air Show Disaster in England 1-10 Fighter Jet Broke apart in Mid-Air killing 12. Witnessed by 100,000 avid fans watching the event. They had the wreckage and photos and asked the people to write in. Got a few 1000 people to respond. Fewer than 6 gave info that was consistent with the evidence they had • We can plant false memories (Elizabeth Loftus) Did an experiment with on of her graduate student’s 14 yr old younger brother. Said here are four stories from your past (only three actually happened – one of them, being lost in the mall – was planted) Over the next two weeks whenever you remember something about one of these, write it down. Chris rate each of the 4 for clarity, he gave the false on 8 of 11. He picked a real memory as being fake.

  9. Children’s Eyewitness Recall • Children are “suggestible” • The younger, the more suggestible • Credible when… • Asked in worlds they understand • Interviewed by neutral person • Asked non-leading questions • “what did you see?” –that’s it.

  10. Memories of Abuse • Repressed or Created???? • Questionable methods of memory construction • Guided imagery, hypnosis, dream analysis • Symptoms are too general • YET disputing memories of abuse adds to trauma and allows molesters to go free

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