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Chapter 11

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Chapter 11

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    1. Chapter 11

    Forgetting

    2. Memory

    Internal record or representation of past experience Not necessarily the same as the original experience

    3. Comparative Psychology View of Memory

    Not experiences stored or retrieved Experience’s ability to change an organism’s behaviour under certain conditions Stimulus control

    4. Forgetting

    Deterioration in learned behaviour following a period without practice Defined behaviourally Note: extinction is not the same as forgetting

    5. Measuring Forgetting

    Training Waiting for some period (“retention interval”) Testing

    6. Free Recall Method

    Train, wait, test See how much deterioration in performance “All-or-nothing” test of behaviour May not be appropriate for complex tasks Some elements remembered, others not

    7. Prompted (Cued) Recall

    Give prompts to increase likelihood of behaviour Measure number of prompts needed to produce behaviour

    8. Relearning Method

    Reinstall original training procedure after retention period How many trials (or time) needed compared to original training to return to initial level of proficiency?

    9. Recognition Method

    Subject only has to identify material previously learned E.g., distinguish between original stimulus and a number of distracter stimuli

    10. Delayed Matching to Sample

    Show S+ Wait Choose from S+ and S- Sample Delay Matching

    11. Extinction Method

    Train two subjects Put both on extinction, but one has delay between training and extinction and the other doesn’t Compare rate of extinction for two subjects

    12. Gradient Degradation Method

    Establish stimulus control (discrimination training) Measure generalization gradient Repeated measure gen. grad. over time If generalization gradient flattens, forgetting

    13. Variables in Forgetting

    14. Retention Interval

    Time between learning and testing Greater the interval, less retained (i.e., more forgetting) But, time is not an event (time doesn’t account for forgetting) Need causal factors

    15. Overlearning

    Learn to asymptote, then keep training Better recall for longer Point of diminishing return

    16. Prior Learning

    Meaningful material easier to retain than random material (e.g., learning katas) Prior experience important in determining what is meaningful (e.g., words in known or unknown language)

    17. DeGroot (1966)

    Arranged chess pieces in legal patterns on board Chess masters and novices; 5 seconds to observe Masters reproduced arrangement 90% of time, novices only 40% Is this prior experience, or do chess masters forget less than other people?

    18. Chase & Simon (1973)

    Chess pieces placed randomly on board Masters no better than novices at recall Past learning of “legal” arrangements is what increased masters’ performance in deGroot (1966) study

    19. Proactive Interference

    Previous learning interferes with recall Paired Associate Learning (PAL) technique Subjects learn paired lists, tested with 1 item and must recall second All learn A-C list, but some previously learned A-B list In testing, give A and ask to recall C Those with A-B learning have more difficulty recalling C when given A

    20. Proactive PAL Design

    Experimental Group Control Group

    21. Levine & Murphy (1943)

    Proactive interference with attitudes Students read pro- and anti-communism passages Students who had prior pro-communist attitudes forgot anti-communist elements of passages but remembered pro-elements (and vice versa) Attitudes not innate; effect of prior learning

    22. Subsequent Learning

    Inactivity during retention interval leads to less forgetting than activity Implies forgetting partly based on learning new material Recall (%) 100 50 Hours after learning tested 0 2 4 6 8 sleep awake

    23. Retroactive Interference

    New learning interferes with ability to recall earlier learning PAL technique Subjects learn A-C, but some then learn A-B Test by giving A and recalling C Subjects who learned A-B have worse recall for C

    24. Retroactive PAL Design

    Experimental Group Control Group

    25. Context

    Learning occurs in a context Various stimuli around the learner These stimuli serve as cues to evoke a behaviour If stimuli absent, may have cue-dependent forgetting Stimulus control

    26. Perkins & Weyant (1958)

    Train two groups of rats in two mazes, one black, one white 1 minute retention interval Half of each group tested in original maze, half in maze of opposite colour Opposite colour rats did poorly compared to original maze tested rats

    27. Kamin (1957)

    Gave rats avoidance learning, tested at various retention intervals. Rats’ internal physiological state serves as cues to prompt recall

    28. State-Dependent Learning

    Train under a particular physiological state (e.g., drug condition) and test under various states Recall best when in the same state as training

    29. Application: Foraging

    Finding food Cache: food store Retrieval of food later Spatial memory Wide variety of species Accuracy can be quite high for very long times

    30. Application: Eyewitness Testimony

    Notoriously poor Basic issue of retention interval and forgetting Also the nature of the question used to retrieve information

    31. Loftus & Zanni (1975)

    Subjects watched film of auto accident Asked “Did you see <the>/<a> broken headlight?” “the” subjects twice as likely as “a” subjects to say “yes” Actually, no broken headlight shown Reinforcement history Previous conditioning: “the” (definite article) implies presence; “a” implies possible presence

    32. Learning to Remember

    In essence, improving learning Practice increases retention Overlearning Mnemonics Context cues Prompts

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