Title: The Interaction Between Memory and Language
1The Interaction Between Memory and Language
2So Why Do We Forget?
- Decay
- Interference
- Inappropriate Retrieval Cues
3Why Do Memories Become Distorted?
- Memories are reconstructive in nature
- Bartletts War of the Ghost Experiment
- One night two young men from Egulac went down to
the river to hunt seals and while they were there
it became foggy and calm. Then they heard
war-cries, and they thought "Maybe this is a
war-party". They escaped to the shore, and hid
behind a log. Now canoes came up, and they heard
the noise of paddles, and saw one canoe coming up
to them. There were five men in the canoe, and
they said - "What do you think? We wish to take you along.
We are going up the river to make war on the
people."
- One of the young men said," I have no arrows."
- "Arrows are in the canoe," they said.
- "I will not go along. I might be killed. My
relatives do not know where I have gone. But
you," he said, turning to the other, "may go with
them." - So one of the young men went, but the other
returned home.
- And the warriors went on up the river to a town
on the other side of Kalama. The people came down
to the water and they began to fight, and many
were killed. But presently the young man heard
one of the warriors say, "Quick, let us go home
that Indian has been hit." Now he thought "Oh,
they are ghosts." He did not feel sick, but they
said he had been shot. - So the canoes went back to Egulac and the young
man went ashore to his house and made a fire. And
he told everybody and said "Behold I accompanied
the ghosts, and we went to fight. Many of our
fellows were killed, and many of those who
attacked us were killed. They said I was hit, and
I did not feel sick." - He told it all, and then he became quiet. When
the sun rose he fell down. Something black came
out of his mouth. His face became contorted. The
people jumped up and cried. - He was dead.
4How Did Western Subjects Retell the Story?
- Personal interests and experiences play a part in
retelling stories from memory
- Bartlett's readers (typically unconsciously) made
the story more orderly and coherent within their
own cultural framework
- Something black came from his mouth' tended to
become 'he frothed at the mouth', 'he vomited' or
'breath escaped from his mouth'.
- 'Hunting seals' tended to become 'fishing'.
- 'Canoe' tended to become 'boat' and 'paddles' to
become 'oars
5Distortion Through RI
- Present an event to encode
- Series of slides
- Then ask questions
- Put Leading information in those questions
- How do phrasing of questions affect how we
remember (or misremember)?
- How fast were the cars moving when they hit?
Loftus Palmer, 1974
6Distortion Through RI
Contacted 31MPH
Bumped 38 MPH
Collided - 39 MPH
Smashed 41 MPH
7Distortion Through RI
Was there broken glass at the accident?
Contacted 14
Smashed 32
8Summary of Retrieval Successes and Failures
- Information is lost due to interference, decay,
cues dependent forgetting
- Memory is fallible
- Memory can be subject to distortion
- Implications for eyewitness testimony
- Salient emotionally arousing stimuli are less
likely to be forgotten than neutral stimuli
- But there is no special mechanism for memory of
this information
9Different Systems of Memory
Memory
Declarative
Non -Declarative
Facts Semantic Memory
Events Episodic Memory
Skills/Habits Procedural Memory
Priming Classical Conditioning
Events Episodic Memory
Events Episodic Memory
Skills/Habits Procedural Memory
Skills/Habits Procedural Memory
Facts Semantic Memory
Facts Semantic Memory
Priming Classical Conditioning
Priming Classical Conditioning
10How is Our Knowledge Organized?
- How is semantic memory organized?
- Infer the organization of semantic memory through
a variety of cognitive tasks that uses language
- Sentence processing
- Picture naming
11Hierarchical Model of Semantic Memory
Collins Quillian (1969)
12Task Answer TRUE or FALSE (Collins Quillian,
1969)
Typicality effects?
13Spreading Activation in Semantic Memory
Collins Loftus, 1975
14Priming, Facilitation and the idea of Implicit
Memory
Memory
Declarative
Non -Declarative
Facts Semantic Memory
Events Episodic Memory
Skills/Habits Procedural Memory
Priming Classical Conditioning
Events Episodic Memory
Events Episodic Memory
Skills/Habits Procedural Memory
Skills/Habits Procedural Memory
Facts Semantic Memory
Facts Semantic Memory
Priming Classical Conditioning
Priming Classical Conditioning
15Implicit Memory
- People demonstrate after effects of experience in
the behavior without being able to consciously
recollect the experience itself
- Unconscious influence on behavior
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