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Constructing Fake Memories and Forgetting Real Ones

Understand the phenomenon of constructing fake memories and forgetting real ones with theories on why we forget. Learn about memory distortions, misinformation effects, source amnesia, and more.

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Constructing Fake Memories and Forgetting Real Ones

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  1. Constructing Fake Memories and Forgetting Real Ones

  2. Forgetting and Distortions of Memory • In the 80’s and 90’s “recovered memories” were big headlines. • Individuals of all ages were claiming to suddenly remember events that had been “repressed” and forgotten for years. • Often these memories were of abuse. • Sometimes these recovered memories were corroborated with physical evidence and justice was served. • Other times they were discovered to be fabricated or constructed memories

  3. Constructed memory • A memory or recollection of an event that is false or contains false details that never actually occurred • Theory that holds that memory is a representation, or reconstruction, of the past • Reconstruction can lead to distorted memories of events and experiences

  4. Elizabeth Loftus • Famous Memory researcher • Showed that leading questions can easily influence us to recall false details • Questioners can create entirely new memory by repeatedly asking leading questions Especially true in children

  5. Why Do We Forget?? It is inevitable we all will forget things…but why and how much? • Retention • The proportion of learned information that is retained or remembered • The flip side of forgetting

  6. Three Theories of Why We Forget

  7. Forgetting as an Encoding Failure • Forgetting is often a problem with how information was encoded • You sometimes haven’t forgotten information • The information was actually never encoded in your memory or not encoded at a deep enough level • It never has a chance to enter our LTM. • Sometimes called pseudo-forgetting

  8. Encoding Failure

  9. Forgetting as a Storage Failure • Memories, even saved ones, can decay over time • Decay Theory • Memories just go away over time Without rehearsal, we forget thing over time. Hermann EbbinghausForgetting Curve • Said as time passes by information is forgotten gradually • Example – remembering new vocab. words and forgetting more as time goes by • Example – first day forget very few, but forgetting speeds up over time

  10. Ebbinghaus’s Forgetting Curve

  11. Forgetting as a Retrieval Failure • It’s in there but you can not get it out • Tip-of-the-tongue Phenomenon • Forgotten information feels like it is just out of reach • Interference • One memory gets in the way of another • Two Kinds of Interference • Proactive Interference • Retroactive Interference

  12. Proactive Interference • Earlier memories interfere with new ones • Remembering earlier addresses while having a hard time remembering your new one If you call your new girlfriend your old girlfriend’s name.

  13. Retroactive Interference • New memories reduce ability to retrieve older memories • Remembering new sport champs and forgetting older ones – or forgetting your old phone number when you get a new one When you finally remember this years locker combination, you forget last years.

  14. Other Reasons We May Forget • Motivated Forgetting • Forgetting can sometimes provide a protection from painful memories • Repression • Psychogenic Amnesia • The process of moving anxiety producing memories to the unconscious – Freud • Physical Injury or Trauma • Anterograde Amnesia • The inability to remember events that occur after an injury or traumatic event • Retrograde Amnesia • The inability to remember events that occurred before an injury or traumatic event

  15. Other Reasons We Forget • Distortions of Memory • We sometimes construct memories that did not happen or distort the ones that we do have • Misinformation Effect • Incorporating misleading information of an event into one’s memory • Example – sometimes used by lawyers – Law and Order Clip • Children’s Recall • Very open to misinformation effect • Often provide memories they think an adult expects to hear or when asked very leading questions

  16. Other Reasons We May Forget • Source Amnesia • Having trouble remembering at the time of recall where memories came from • “did I read that in the Post or NY Times?” • It is also common for people to mix up fictional information from novels and movies with factual information from news and personal experiences • Cryptomnesia • Inadvertent plagiarism that occurs when people come up with an idea that they think is original when they were actually exposed to it earlier • Confabulation • Confusion of imagination with memory, and/or the confusion of true memories with false memories • Trying to fill in the blanks of something you are trying to remember with false memories

  17. Deja Vu • The experience of feeling sure that one has witnessed or experienced a new situation previously Possible explanations • An anomaly of memory • an overlap between the short-term memory (events which are perceived as being in the present) and the long-term memory (events which are perceived as being in the past) • Neural misfiring • Two neurons firing from different sources, thus coming up with two sensations (of the same stimulus) each seeming like a different event at a different time

  18. Tip of the Tongue Sydrome

  19. Photographic MemoriesDo they exist? Eidetic Memory The intuitive notion of a “photographic” memory is that it is just like a photograph: you can retrieve it from your memory at will and examine it in detail, zooming in on different parts. Controversial as to whether it really exists!

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