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PS 1507 Memory Forgetting

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Initial rapid forgetting followed by decrease over time. ... TOT ... Tip of the Tongue (TOT) phenomenon - not for students. Sin of blocking. Near universal experience ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PS 1507 Memory Forgetting


1
PS 1507 MemoryForgetting
  • Lecture 4
  • Caroline Green

2
Forgetting
  • Ebbinghaus forgetting curve. Initial rapid
    forgetting followed by decrease over time. (sin
    of transience) Holds for material learned decades
    before. (Bahrick(1984), Conway et al (1991),Cohen
    et al(1992)).
  • Notion of permastore (Bahrick,1984).
  • Neisser(1984)- conceptual knowledge better
    retained than facts.

3
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4
Figure 8.21 The forgetting curve for Spanish
vocabulary. Source Adapted from Bahrick, H.P.,
Semantic memory content in permastore Fifty
years of Spanish learned in school. Journal of
Experimental Psychology (General), 1984, 113,
129.
5
Memory decline
  • Conceptual knowledge better retained than facts
  • Memory declines over 3 years then stabilises
    (Bahrick(1984),Conway(1992))
  • Ageing story recall declines first, word recall
    later. Transience more marked after 60. Higher
    education may alleviate effect

6
The brain and transience sites implicated
  • Hippocampus inner parts of temporal lobe
    important
  • Also parts of frontal lobe

7
Why do we forget? Theories.
  • Trace decay theory
  • Interference theory
  • Cue-dependent forgetting/encoding specificity
  • Context-dependent /State-dependent memory
  • Repression/motivated forgetting

8
Trace decay theory
  • Memory traces decay or fade spontaneously over
    time.
  • Time elapsed since learning is of crucial
    importance.
  • Jenkins and Dallenbach (1924) found evidence
    against theory.

9
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10
Interference Theory
  • Forgetting caused by interference of 2 types
  • Retroactive - new memories interfere with old
  • Proactive old memories interfere with new
  • Greater similarity greater forgetting.
  • Does not always apply well to everyday life

11
Cue-dependent forgetting/encoding specificity
  • Cue dependent forgetting - retrieval cues missing
    or not used.
  • TOT
  • Encoding specificity principle better recall
    when cues present at encoding also present
    during retrieval.

12
Tip of the Tongue (TOT) phenomenon - not for
students
  • Sin of blocking
  • Near universal experience
  • Peoples names worst affected
  • Worse with age

13
Context and state dependent memory
  • Context dependent memory
  • (Godden and Baddeley(1975) scuba divers,
    Marian and Neisser(2000)- Russian immigrants)
  • State dependent memory
  • (Miles and Hardman, 1998 bicycle ergonometer).
  • Mood dependent memory
  • (Eich, 1995)

14
Motivated forgetting/ Repression
  • Motivated forgetting tendency to forget things
    one doesnt want to think about
  • Repression process by which emotionally
    threatening experiences are banished to the
    unconscious mind (Freud (1901))
  • Contradictory evidence Loftus Burns(1982)
    found effects, no effect (Bradley
    Baddeley(1990)), better memory for traumatic
    events (Christianson Loftus(1987).

15
Absent-mindedness prospective memory
  • Inattention to details/Lapses of attention
    produce(s) encoding failure causing slips of
    memory.
  • Occurrence of memory slips

16
Slips of memory occur with
  • Familiar surroundings
  • Preoccupation
  • Other distractions
  • Pressure of time
  • Changes to established routine
  • Age
  • Time based tasks more than event based tasks
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