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Forgetting

Forgetting. Basic model of memory. CUE. We’ve talked about forgetting (failure to retrieve) occurring if you don’t have the right cues at retrieval. TARGET. The “right” cues are the ones that make you think of the material the same way that you did at encoding.

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Forgetting

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  1. Forgetting

  2. Basic model of memory CUE We’ve talked about forgetting (failure to retrieve) occurring if you don’t have the right cues at retrieval. TARGET The “right” cues are the ones that make you think of the material the same way that you did at encoding.

  3. It’s also possible, though, that the cue is just fine, and it’s the connection that gets lost. Also possible that it’s the memory itself that becomes degraded or lost This cue doesn’t match the way you thought about the highway at encoding What’s the highway to Richmond? What’s the highway to Richmond? What’s the highway to Richmond? What’s the highway to Richmond? I-64 I-64 I-64

  4. Decay Occlusion Unlearning Repression Selective retrieval Cue Bias What’s the highway to Richmond? What’s the highway to Richmond? What’s the highway to Richmond? I-64 I-64 I-64

  5. Cue bias—you can’t get the cues back • Usually thought to be due to aging • May happen due to extreme context effects—the world is a different place and can’t be the same

  6. Cue bias—childhood amnesia What’s your earliest childhood memory?

  7. Cue bias study (Simcock & Hayne, 2002) • Children (2-3) are shown “the incredible toy shrinking machine.” • Their vocabulary is also measured. • One year later their memory for the machine is tested, and they describe it only using words that were in their vocabulary a year ago. • Possible that cue bias is the reason for childhood amnesia—you can’t access pre-verbal memories because you experienced them differently

  8. What’s the highway to Richmond? What’s the highway to Richmond? What’s the highway to Richmond? What’s the highway to Richmond? • Decay—loss is spontaneous • Occlusion—loss is due to new learning; can only retrieve new memory • Unlearning—loss is due to new learning • Repression—loss is an active, unconscious process. I-64 29 I-64 29 I-64 29

  9. Decay--orderliness of forgetting Woodworth & Schlossberg, 1952 If you put this on a logarithmic scale. . . .

  10. The orderly, logarithmic rate of forgetting indicated to people that decay was responsible for forgetting.

  11. Problems with decay • Time alone doesn’t cause anything; it’s processes occurring in time that makes things happen • Theory is difficult to test.

  12. Ideal experiment to test decay Bad memory due to decay Encoding Test Encoding Test Memory should decay here Time

  13. What actually happens Memory equal due to decay Encoding Test Encoding Test People think; opportunity for interference Test Encoding Sleep Time

  14. Jenkins & Dallenbach, 1924 If decay is responsible for forgetting then what you do during the interval shouldn’t matter—the rate of forgetting will be the same. What you do during the delay DOES matter.

  15. Occlusion Highway to Richmond? An old response that is already in memory competes with a new response you’re trying to learn. Hugo Munsterberg tried putting his pocket watch in a different pocket than he was used to, to see how often he would reach in the wrong pocket. 29 I-64

  16. Tip of the tongue Someone who hates women Misogynist Navigational instrument for measuring the angular elevation of the sun above the horizon Sextant Long, narrow flat-bottomed boat used in the canals of venice. Gondola

  17. Occlusion It sounds good, but probably doesn’t account for that much forgetting.

  18. Unlearning What’s your phone number? Learning new stuff causes unlearning of old stuff. How to test? 555-1111

  19. Barnes & Underwood Asked to produce both associates, and give lots of time; therefore minimize occlusion Learn list of repairings of associates (varied how much practice) Learn list of paired associates

  20. 8 List 2 7 6 Mean Correct Responses 5 List 1 4 3 0 5 10 15 20 25 Trials on Second List Results So they do get evidence for unlearning, but. . .

  21. The unlearning account; change in association. TER TER TER TER FUNNY TIRED FUNNY FUNNY TIRED FUNNY TIRED

  22. How do you know that it’s really unlearning, i.e., the association that’s getting weaker? Maybe it’s just overwhelmed by the strength of the new associate.

  23. Volume metaphor TER TER TER TER FUNNY TIRED FUNNY FUNNY TIRED FUNNY TIRED

  24. “TER-TIRED” “TER-FUNNY” Original learning is intact--no unlearning has taken place--but it’s hard to “hear” because the new learning is so robust.

  25. Volume vs. Occlusion Note that this is NOT occlusion; it’s about how you interpret what you retrieve, NOT your ability to retrieve the right associate.

  26. Repression • Active forgetting of traumatic material • Very difficult to prove, but probably does happen on occasion • Much more frequent that traumatic events lead to good memory.

  27. Common lore • Repression is very effective—but the memory can be recovered & highly accurate (i.e., goes from 0% to 100%). • Repressed memories may be recovered through hypnosis, or by imaging yourself as a child again, etc. • Danger: hypnosis & “guided imagery” can plant memories

  28. Evidence • Piaget’s kidnapping • Loftus et al. (1996) “lost in a store” study. • “Anal probe” study Conclusion: repression is poorly understood, probably possible, but rare. Also likely that false repressed memories can be planted.

  29. Selective Retrieval This idea is that retrieving some stuff actually makes the retrieval of related stuff get harder, and it does so because it affects the representation, not the association. Highway to Richmond? I-64 Selective retrieval

  30. The idea is that cues are often associated not just with one memory, but with many; you need to suppress these other memories in order to retrieve only the one that you want.

  31. An example: retrieval induced forgetting Practice Retrieval Study Test Fruit-orange Fruit-or Fruit-or Fruit-banana Fruit-ba Drink-lemonade Drink-le Good Bad, relative to Drink-lemonade

  32. Retrieval induced forgetting: is it selective retrieval? Fruit Fruit But it could also be Banana Banana Orange

  33. BUT, selective retrieval makes a unique prediction. . . Fruit Yellow Banana If it’s the representation that’s inhibited, it should be inhibited even when accessed another way.

  34. Anderson & Spellman Study categories and examples of categories, e.g., RED-BLOOD. If you study this, then the other examples of the category RED should be harder to learn.

  35. “RED” Other red things are dampened so you can retrieve blood. “RED”

  36. If selective retrieval takes place, it will be harder to learn “FOOD-STRAWBERRY” after learning “RED-BLOOD” It will be hard to learn “FOOD-STRAWBERRY” because STRAWBERRY has been inhibited as RED-BLOOD was studied. “RED” “FOOD”

  37. It’s should not be the case that FOOD-STRAWBERRY is hardto learn simply because all associates are now hard to learn.To test that, compare learning FOOD-STRAWBERRY to other subjects who learn FOOD-CRACKER. “FOOD” “RED”

  38. Study “RED-BLOOD” Study “FOOD-STRAWBERRY” 22% correct Study “RED-BLOOD” Study “FOOD-CRACKER” 38% correct Inhibition due to selective retrieval does take place. BUT it could be that this effect we’ve described is relatively temporary; we don’t know that yet. Conclude

  39. Summary Most of the types of forgetting we’ve talked about seem somewhat temporary. It’s doesn’t sound like permanent loss; it sounds like temporary loss. Does this mean that all learning is permanent? Forgettingoccurs only because other learning is interfering with accessto the learning we want to access?

  40. Does this mean that all learning is permanent? Before we take up this issue, you should realize that this proposition is impossible to disprove.

  41. All learning is permanent • Spontaneous recovery • Hypnosis • Wilder Penfield experiments.

  42. Spontaneous recovery Examples. . .? 1. Often no way to verify 2. Even if true, the fact that some memoriesare lost for a long time, yet are recoverabledoes not mean that all memories that are lost are recoverable.

  43. Hypnosis Hypnosis is perfectly real, and cool things can be done with it. It does nothing to help memory. It increasesconfidence in memory, butnot accuracy of memory.

  44. Results from a hypnosis study

  45. Wilder Penfield studies Direct brain stimulation: usual report is full-blown recovery of forgotten memories.

  46. What’s not reported: 1) happened rarely: perhaps 7-8% 2) no way to assess accuracy3) subjects saw themselves in memory,home-movie style, and reported that they were “dream-like”

  47. In sum. . . It’s impossible to disprove that everything that ever happened to you is recorded, but most memory researchers don’t believe this is the case.

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