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Levels of Processing: Craik and Lockhart

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Shallow = structural color, graphemic. Intermediate = phonemic sound (e.g., rhyme) ... Duration ('primo') Capacity (?) Format (?) Type of forgetting ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Levels of Processing: Craik and Lockhart


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Levels of Processing Craik and Lockhart
  • Deeper processing (characteristics of the
    stimulus and how we process it) longer lasting
    memory codes
  • Encoding levels
  • Shallow structural? color, graphemic
  • Intermediate phonemic ? sound (e.g., rhyme)
  • Deep semantic ? meaning

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Enriching Encoding Improving Memory
  • Elaboration
  • For example thinking of examples
  • Visual Imagery
  • Easier for concrete objects Dual-coding theory
  • Example Memory pegs

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One is a bunTwo is a shoeThree is a treeFour
is a doorEtc.
AlligatorMonkey Ladder Eggs
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One is a bun.Alligator
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One is a bunTwo is a shoeThree is a treeFour
is a doorFive is a hiveSix is a stickSeven is
heavenEight is a gateNine is a lineTen is a hen
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Storage Maintaining Information in Memory
  • Computer analogy
  • Information-processing theories
  • Subdivide memory into 3 different stores
  • Sensory, Short-term, Long-term
  • Characteristics
  • Duration (primo)
  • Capacity (?)
  • Format (?)
  • Type of forgetting (?)

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Sensory Memory
  • Brief preservation - original sensory form
  • George Sperling (1960)
  • Classic experiment on visual sensory store
  • Auditory/Visual approximately ¼ second

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Forgettingdecay!
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Short Term Memory (STM)
  • Limited duration about 20 seconds without
    rehearsal
  • Limited capacity magical number 7 plus or
    minus 2 without chunking
  • Format primarily phonemic
  • Forgetting primarily decay

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Short-Term Memory as Working Memory
  • Not limited to phonemic encoding
  • Not limited to decay
  • Baddeley (1986) 3 components of working memory

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  • Figure 7.9, Weiten

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Long-Term Memory
  • Long-Term Memory
  • Unlimited Capacity
  • Permanent storage view
  • Flashbulb memories
  • Debate are STM and LTM really different?
  • Phonemic vs. Semantic encoding
  • Decay vs. Interference based forgetting

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Retrieval Getting Information Out of Memory
  • Tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon
  • Retrieval cues
  • Recalling an event
  • Context cues
  • Reconstructing memories
  • Misinformation effect
  • Source monitoring

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Forgetting When Memory Lapses
  • Ebbinghauss Forgetting Curve
  • Retention the proportion of material retained
  • Recall
  • Recognition
  • Relearning

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  • Figure 7.13, Weiten

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Permastore (Bahrick)
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So what causes forgetting?
  • Interference!
  • How to avoid it?
  • Organize Order material in the appropriate
    sequence.
  • Isolate (and eliminate) potentially interfering
    information
  • Spaced practice
  • Dont cram!
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