Title: Lecture 11 Psyco 350, A1 Fall, 2006
1Lecture 11 Psyco 350, A1Fall, 2006
2Outline
- Forgetting Continued
- Misinformation Effect Overtime
- Inhibitory Mechanisms Forgetting
- Summary of Episodic Basic.
- Implicit Memory
- Introduction
- Dissociating Implicit Explicit Memory
- Transfer Appropriate Processing
3Misinformation w/ Modified Procedure Belli (1992)
- Materials
- 44 slides (mother child arguing)
- 4 crit slides (coffeemaker, blender, toaster)
- 500 word narrative w/ 2 misleading statements
- 2IFC modified reco test
4Misinformation w/ Modified Procedure Belli (1992)
Design manipulates timing of misinformation
view slides ? ? Exp1 5-min delay Exp3 5-day
delay ? read narrative ? 10 min delay ? reco test
5Belli (1992) Results
- W/ 5-min delay Mod Misled Control
- consistent w/ Biased Guessing
- W/ 5-day delay Mod Misled lt Control
- (at lease) consistent w/ Coexistence RI
6Blocking Hypothesis Bellis Explanation
- Post-event information impairs access to original
traces when - original trace is weak
- post-event information is strong
7Misinformation Effect My Take
- Memory impairment, coexistence, source
monitoring errors are not mutually exclusive - As the work on Hindsight Bias indicates, new
information can - modify existing information
- coexist w/ existing information
- block access to existing information
- Biased guessing is a problem in 2IFC situation
particularly when target misinformation are of
roughly equal strength - Nonetheless, bias to select foil in standard
condition, indicates that post-event information
is (some times) accepted as true may be
incorporated into event representation.
8Inhibitory Processes
- Inhibition well established at neural level.
- increased activation of one unit, decreases
activation in others. - Inhibition also observed in visual
attention/object perceptions - Inhibition Processes in Memory Performance
- retrieval of ITEMI decreases the likelihood that
ITEMJ will be retrieved. - Assumption Inhibition is an active process
- Has the flavor of repression/suppression, but
functions to increase memory efficient not to
protect the self.
9Retrieval Induced Forgetting
- Anderson, Bjork, Bjork (1994)
- Aim Demonstrate that retrieval can produce
forgetting - Materials
- category-instance pairs
- COLOR-red PET-dog FRUIT-apple
- 6 pairs/category
10Anderson, Bjork, Bjork (1994) Procedure
- 3-Phase Procedure
- Study each pair presented once for 5 s
- Retrieval Practice
- complete category-stem w/ list instance
- FRUIT ap__
- Each category-stem presented 3 times
- 20 minute delay
- Test Phase
- given each category name ? recall all instances
11Anderson, Bjork, Bjork (1994) Results
- Practice Effect PIPC gtgt UIUC
- UIUC gt UIPC
- if not rehearsed, being an instance of a
practiced category hinders recall. - Interpretation UIPC inhabited during practice in
order to make retrieval of practiced items easer.
12Inhibitory Processes
- Inhibitory Processing still not well studied.
- Parameters still being explored
- range
- strength
- duration
- Alternative accounts of retrieval-inducted
forgetting being explored. - Retroactive Interference
- Associative Inference (deferential spreading
activation)
13(Episodic) Memory Basic Implications
- The stronger the link between a cued concept and
an Event Representation ER, the greater
probability that the ER will be recalled. - non-elaborative rehearsal
- The more ER-to-concept links there are, the
greater the probability that a given cue will
serve as an effective retrieval cue.
elaboration, depth or processing
14(Episodic) Memory Basic Implications
- Context (internal external) is encoded as part
of the ER, and thus contextual features can serve
as retrieval cues. - Increasing the similarity between encoding
contexts and retrieval contexts increases the
probability of retrieval. context effects, TAP
15(Episodic) Memory Basic Implications
- Probability of recall decreases, as of ERs
linked to a cued concept increases.
interference - --------------------------------------------------
-------------- - Other possible mechanisms
- decay
- knowledge revision biased reconstruction
- inhibition
16Implicit Memory
- Any form of memory that does not require
consciousness and can operate without a person
being aware that he is using his memory.
Radvansky, p. 123 - People show evidence of memories for experiences
that they cannot consciously retrieve. Anderson,
p. 298 - Memory without awareness Neath Supernant, p
139
17Implicit Memory
- Strategy for studying implicit memory
- Demonstrate that prior experience affects
performance on tasks that do not require
retrieval or recognition of those prior
experiences. - Such test are called Indirect tests.
18Types of Memory Tests
- Test
-
- Direct (explicit) Indirect
(implicit) - recall, cued recall
- recognition, recency
- frequency Word-related Test
Judgments - fragment completion
fame - word-stem
completion truth - perceptual ID
liking - lexical decision
r-w estimation -
word-association -
general-knowledge -
category-instance generation
19Common Indirect Tests
- Fragment Completion
- _ece_ny
- recency
- Stem Completion
- fre_ _ _ _ _ _
- frequency
- Anagrams
- ticilipm
- implicit
- Lexical Decision
- word/non-word? TREB
- Perceptual Identification
- read word (identify object) presented VERY
briefly (e.g., 25 ms)
20Evidence for Implicit Memory on Indirect Tests
- Indirect tests typically use improved performance
as the measure of implicit memory - Priming the improvement in performance on a
subsequent occasion due to processing on a
previous occasion
21Priming Effects
- Exp condition a prior exposure to stim
- Control no prior exposure to stim
- Priming
- fragment, stem, anagram
- dv complete exp gt control
- Perceptional Identification
- dv -- correct exp gt control
- Lexical Decision
- dv RT exp lt control
22Dissociating Implicit Explicit Memory
- Dissociation One variable affects one task
differently than it affects another - _______________________________________
- Tulving, Schacter, Stark (1982)
- Design
- Delay X Test Type
. - 1 hr fragment completion (indirect)
- 1 week recognition (direct)
23Tulving, Schacter, Stark (1982)
24Tulving, Schacter, Stark (1982)
- Results
- Reco ? w/ dealy
- frag unaffected by delay
- Delay causes a dissociation between reco frag
tests. - Implication
- Test tap different forms of memory.
25(Double) Dissociating Implicit Explicit Memory
- Jacoby (1983)
- Aims Using same materials demonstrate
- explicit memory ? w/ depth of processing
- implicit memory ? w/ perceptual similarity
- Materials selected so that
- as depth of processing ?, perceptual similarity ?
26Jacoby (1983)
- Design
- Encoding Task X
Test . - (Antonym) Generation recognition
- Read (antonym in context) perceptual ID (40 ms)
- Read (target alone)
27Jacoby(1983) Two perspective on Encoding Tasks
- Predictions
- Recognition deeper processing should produce
better performance. - Percp ID priming should become stronger as study
and test materials become more similar.
28Jacoby (1983) Results
- w/out prior exposure (control) perc ID 60
- In all conditions
- Perc ID gt 60
- priming
- _________________________
- Reco ? with Depth of Processing
- Perc ID ? perc similarity
- (Perc ID ? LoP)
- Evidence for 2 types of memory
29Transfer Appropriate Process Theory
- Assumes
- Performance depends of match between processing
at study and processing at test. - Analogous to encoding specificity.
- Two-types of Processes
- Data-driven (perceptual) processing of physical
features. - Conceptually-driven (semantic) processing for
meaning