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Chapter 8 Memory

Chapter 8 Memory. Numbers. How well can you remember these?. Quiz. Memory: Some Key Terms. Memory: Active system that stores, organizes, alters, and recovers (retrieves) information Encoding: Converting information into a useable form

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Chapter 8 Memory

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  1. Chapter 8Memory

  2. Numbers How well can you remember these?

  3. Quiz

  4. Memory: Some Key Terms • Memory: Active system that stores, organizes, alters, and recovers (retrieves) information • Encoding: Converting information into a useable form • Storage: Holding this information in memory for later use • Retrieval: Taking memories out of storage

  5. In some ways, a computer acts like a mechanical memory system. Both systems process information, and both allow encoding, storage, and retrieval of data. Fig. 8-1, p. 252

  6. Sensory Memory • Sensory memory: Storing an exact copy of incoming information for a few seconds or less (either what is seen or heard); the first stage of memory • Iconic memory: A mental image or visual representation • Echoic memory: After a sound is heard, a brief continuation of the activity in the auditory system

  7. Short-Term Memory (STM) • Storing small amounts of information briefly • Working memory: Part of STM; like a mental “scratchpad” • Selective attention: Focusing (voluntarily) on a selected portion of sensory input (e.g., selective hearing) • Phonetically: Storing information by sound; how most things are stored in STM • Very sensitive to interruption or interference

  8. Long-Term Memory (LTM) • Storing meaningful information relatively permanently • Stored on basis of meaning and importance

  9. Culture? • Members of cultures that trade beads can remember color patterns of long strands of beads; those who herd cattle can remember and recognize dozens of individual animals. Name some type of information that is easily remembered in our culture, but that might be difficult for a member of another culture to encode? Include subculture

  10. The Atkinson-Schiffrin model. Remembering is thought to involve at least three steps. Incoming information is first held for a second or two by sensory memory. Information selected by attention is then transferred to temporary storage in short-term memory (STM). If new information is not rapidly encoded, or rehearsed, it is forgotten. If it is transferred to long-term memory (LTM), it becomes relatively permanent, although retrieving it may be a problem. The preceding is a useful, but highly simplified, model of memory; it may not be literally true of what happens in the brain Fig. 8-2, p. 253

  11. Short-Term Memory Concepts • Digit span: Test of attention and short-term memory; string of numbers is recalled forward or backward • Magic number 7 (±2): STM is limited to holding seven (plus or minus two) information bits at once • Information bit: Meaningful single piece of information, like numbers or letters

  12. More Short-Term Memory Concepts • Recoding: Reorganizing or modifying information to assist storage in memory • Information chunks: Bits of information that are grouped into larger units

  13. Chunking Activity

  14. Maintenance Rehearsal • Repeating information silently to prolong its presence in STMElaborative Encoding: Links new information with existing memories and knowledge in LTM • Good way to transfer STM information into LTM • Long-Term Memory Concepts: Constructive processing: Updating memories on basis of logic, reasoning, or adding new information • Pseudo-memories: False memories that a person believes are true or accurate

  15. Remember these words: • Ask them to introspect about their initial processing of the words. Are they aware of an echo? Do they silently rehearse the words? Do they attempt to chunk them in some way? Do they try to link them to knowledge in long-term storage?

  16. Exposed cerebral cortex of a patient undergoing brain surgery. Numbers represent points that reportedly produced “memories” when electrically stimulated. A critical evaluation of such reports suggests that they are more like dreams than memories. This fact raises questions about claims that long-term memories are permanent Fig. 8-3, p. 256

  17. Eyewitness memories are notoriously inaccurate. By the time witnesses are asked to testify in court, information they learned after an incident may blend into their original memories. Cognitive interview: Use of various cues and strategies to improve eyewitness memory p. 257

  18. Redintegration • Memories that are reconstructed or expanded by starting with one memory and then following chains of association to related memories

  19. Suppose you are shown a series of photographs that depict various scenes related to having lunch at the campus commons. One of the photos shows an unexpected event (the spilled soda). If you were to see all of the photos again a few days later, it’s likely that you would “remember” seeing the image on the right (next slide), even though it wasn’t in the original group of photos. When we see an unexplained event, we are very likely to think about its cause. Later, it is easy to mistake these thoughts for an actual memory Fig. 8-4a, p. 258

  20. Fig. 8-4b, p. 258

  21. Types of Long-Term Memories • Procedural (skilled): Long-term memories of conditioned responses and learned skills (e.g., driving) • Declarative (fact): Part of LTM that contains factual information

  22. Subparts of Declarative Memory • Semantic memory: Includes impersonal facts and everyday knowledge • Episodic: Includes personal experiences linked with specific times and places

  23. A hypothetical network of facts about animals shows what is meant by the structure of memory. Small networks of ideas such as this are probably organized into larger and larger units and higher levels of meaning. Fig. 8-5, p. 259

  24. The tower puzzle. In this puzzle, all the colored disks must be moved to another post without ever placing a larger disk on a smaller one. Only one disk may be moved at a time, and a disk must always be moved from one post to another (it cannot be held aside). An amnesic patient learned to solve the puzzle in 31 moves, the minimum possible. Even so, each time he began, he protested that he did not remember ever solving the puzzle before and that he did not know how to begin. Evidence like this suggests that memories for skills are distinct from memories for facts. Fig. 8-6, p. 260

  25. In the model shown here, long-term memory is divided into procedural memory (learned actions and skills) and declarative memory (stored facts). Declarative memories can be either semantic (impersonal knowledge) or episodic (personal experiences associated with specific times and places). Fig. 8-7, p. 260

  26. Measuring Memory • Tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) state: Feeling that a memory is available but not quite retrievable • Feeling of knowing: Feeling that allows people to predict beforehand whether they’ll be able to remember something

  27. Recall • Direct retrieval of facts or information • Hardest to recall items in the middle of an ordered list; known as the serial position effect • Easier to remember first and last items in a list

  28. Fig. 8-8, p. 262

  29. Measuring Memory Continued • Recognition memory: Previously learned material is correctly identified • Usually superior to recall • Distractors: False items included with a correct item • Wrong choices on multiple-choice tests • False positive: False sense of recognition

  30. More on Measuring Memory • Relearning: Learning again something that was previously learned • Used to measure memory of prior learning • Savings score: Amount of time saved when relearning information

  31. Measuring Memory Concluded • Explicit memory: Past experiences that are consciously brought to mind • Implicit memory: A memory not known to exist; memory that is unconsciously retrieved • Priming: When cues are used to activate hidden memories

  32. External cues like those found in a photograph, in a scrapbook, or during a walk through an old neighborhood often aid recall of seemingly lost memories. For many veterans, finding a familiar name engraved in the Vietnam Veterans Memorial unleashes a flood of memories. p. 266

  33. Curve of Forgetting • Graph that shows the amount of memory information remembered after varying lengths of time • Nonsense syllables: Meaningless three-letter words (fej, quf) that test learning and forgetting • Encoding failure: When a memory was never formed in the first place

  34. Don’t Forget These Terms! • Memory traces: Physical changes in nerve cells or brain activity that occur when memories are stored • Memory decay: When memory traces become weaker; fading or weakening of memories • Disuse: Theory that memory traces weaken when memories are not periodically used or retrieved

  35. Handout 8.1 • When I say “GO”, you have 45 seconds to try and remember and learn as many words as you can from your list

  36. Forgetting • A. What is the difference between the two lists? You should project the two lists together on an overhead projector so the students can compare them. • B. Why is there a difference in performance on the two lists? • C. Some students who had the second list, the one lacking organization, will still do as well as or better than those in the other group. Identify those persons and try to find out what they did to recall so much. This could lead to some interesting discussion of memory techniques. • D. Can what has been found in this exercise apply to the study habits of the students? Discuss ways to make it work for them.

  37. Fig. 8-9, p. 264

  38. Some More Theories of Forgetting • Memory cue: Any stimulus associated with a memory; usually enhances retrieval of a memory • A person will forget if cues are missing at retrieval time

  39. The amount of forgetting after a period of sleep or of being awake. Notice that sleep causes less memory loss than activity that occurs while one is awake. Fig. 8-14, p. 268

  40. What is your earliest memory and how old were you? Psychology Today has surveyed its readers regarding their earliest memories. Ninety-six percent of the respondents reported having memories prior to the age of six, with sixty-eight percent reporting recall for events occurring when they were two or three. Furthermore, a surprising seven percent said they had memories prior to age one, and a few even claimed to have prenatal recollections as well as memories of their own birth! While some of the early memories were of traumatic experiences (such as the birth of a sibling, being injured, or the death of relatives or pets), the majority of recollections were of more mundane things (like being given a bath, having a picture taken, or being pushed in a swing). Interestingly, most of the memories involved images rather than events. People remembered things like curtains blowing in the breeze, a light shining on someone’s face, and a mobile hanging in the air. This is probably because small children generally lack the language skills necessary to encode a complicated series of events. Many psychologists, in fact, believe that it is rare for people to remember things that occurred before they were able to talk.

  41. State-Dependent Learning • When memory retrieval is influenced by bodily state at time of learning; if your body state is the same at the time of learning AND the time of retrieval, retrievals will be improved • If Robert is drunk and forgets where his car is parked, it may be easier to recall the location if he gets drunk again! • Can include moods also

  42. Fig. 8-13, p. 267

  43. Interference • Tendency for new memories to impair retrieval of older memories, and the reverse • Retroactive interference: Tendency for new memories to interfere with retrieval of old memories • Proactive interference: Prior learning inhibits (interferes with) recall of later learning

  44. Retroactive and proactive interference. The order of learning and testing shows whether interference is retroactive (backward) or proactive (forward). Fig. 8-16, p. 268

  45. Transfer of Training • Positive transfer: Mastery of one task aids learning or performing another • Negative transfer: Mastery of one task conflicts with learning or performing another

  46. Repression and Suppression • Repression: Unconsciously pushing painful, embarrassing, or threatening memories out of awareness/consciousness • Motivated forgetting • Suppression: Consciously putting something painful or threatening out of mind or trying to keep it from entering awareness

  47. Memory Formation • Retrograde Amnesia: Forgetting events that occurred before an injury or trauma • Anterograde Amnesia: Forgetting events that follow an injury or trauma • Consolidation: Forming a long-term memory in the brain

  48. Electroconvulsive Shock (ECS) • Mild electrical shock passed through the brain produces a convulsion, destroys any memory that is being formed • One way to prevent consolidation

  49. Memory Structures • Hippocampus: Brain structure associated with emotion and transfer of information passing from short-term memory into long-term memory • If damaged, person can no longer “create” long-term memories and thus will always live in the present • Memories prior to damage will remain intact

  50. Flashbulb Memories • Memories created during times of personal tragedy, accident, or other emotionally significant events • Where were you when you heard that terrorists had attacked the USA on September 11th, 2001? • Includes both positive and negative events • Not always accurate • Great confidence is placed in them even though they may be inaccurate

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