Title: PSYCHOLOGY 11002 General Psychology
1PSYCHOLOGY 110-02General Psychology
- University of Southern Mississippi
- Department of Psychology
- Dr. David J. Echevarria, PhD
- Spring 2008
- david.echevarria_at_usm.edu
- www.usm.edu/neurolab
Chapter 7 Memory
2Chapter 7 Human Memory
3Minute quiz
- Chapter 6 is on learning
- Chapter 7 is on memory
- How is memory related to learning???
4Without memory learning is useless!
- Think about all the times in one day you rely on
your memory - When is my next class?
- Did I pay my rent?
- Where did I park my car?
- When is my boy/girl friends birthday?
- Performance on exams
5How are memories stored?
- Tip of the tongue
- Did you ever say, I cant remember only to
actually remember later on? - How easily are they accessed?
- What can interfere with memory?
6Whats the capacity of short-term memory?
- Memory span Number of items that can be recalled
from short-term memory, in order, on half of the
tested memory trials - Its about 7 plus or minus 2 items
- Not absolute also depends on
- How quickly items can be rehearsed
- Chunking
- Rearranging incoming information into meaningful
or familiar patterns
7The Working Memory Model
- Several distinct mechanisms
- Phonological loop Like the inner voice stores
word sounds - Visuospatial sketchpad Stores visual and spatial
information - Central executive Determines which mechanism to
use, coordinates among them - Brain damage can selectively affect a single
mechanism
8Human Memory Basic Questions
- How does information get into memory?
- How is information maintained in memory?
- How is information pulled back out of memory?
9Figure 7.2 Three key processes in memory
10Encoding Getting Information Into Memory
- The role of attention
- Focusing awareness
- Selective attention selection of input
- Filtering early or late?
11Figure 7.3 Models of selective attention
12Levels of ProcessingCraik and Lockhart (1972)
- Incoming information processed at different
levels - Deeper processing longer lasting memory codes
- Encoding levels
- Structural shallow
- Phonemic intermediate
- Semantic deep
13Figure 7.4 Levels-of-processing theory
14Scanning a Scene
http//www.sol.lu.se/humlab/eyetracking/
Above is a scanpath of one reader over a
broadsheet newspaper spread. The reader turned
pages in her own pace, and read the entire
newspaper. This is quite typical data. The texts
are read no deeper than 40 of their lengths.
Very short looks on photos and long looks on
information graphics.
15Figure 7.5 Retention at three levels of
processing
16Enriching Encoding Improving Memory
- Elaboration linking a stimulus to other
information at the time of encoding - Thinking of examples
- Visual Imagery creation of visual images to
represent words to be remembered - Easier for concrete objects Dual-coding theory
- Self-Referent Encoding
- Making information personally meaningful
17Storage Maintaining Information in Memory
- Analogy information storage in computers
information storage in human memory - Information-processing theories
- Subdivide memory into 3 different stores
- Sensory, Short-term, Long-term
18Figure 7.7 The Atkinson and Schiffrin model of
memory storage
19Sensory Memory
- Brief preservation of information in original
sensory form - Auditory/Visual approximately ¼ second
- George Sperling (1960)
- Classic experiment on visual sensory store
20Figure 7.8 Sperlings (1960) study of sensory
memory
21Short Term Memory (STM)
- Limited capacity magical number 7 plus or minus
2 - Chunking grouping familiar stimuli for storage
as a single unit - Limited duration about 20 seconds without
rehearsal - Rehearsal the process of repetitively
verbalizing or thinking about the information
22Figure 7.9 Peterson and Petersons (1959) study
of short-term memory
23Short-Term Memory as Working Memory
- STM not limited to phonemic encoding
- Loss of information not only due to decay
- Baddeley (1986) 3 components of working memory
- Phonological rehearsal loop
- Visuospatial sketchpad
- Executive control system
24Long-Term Memory Unlimited Capacity
- Permanent storage?
- Flashbulb memories
- Recall through hypnosis
- Debate are STM and LTM really different?
- Phonemic vs. Semantic encoding
- Decay vs. Interference based forgetting
25How is Knowledge Representedand Organized in
Memory?
- Clustering and Conceptual Hierarchies
- Schemas and Scripts
- Semantic Networks
- Connectionist Networks and PDP Models
26Retrieval Getting InformationOut of Memory
- The tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon a failure in
retrieval - Retrieval cues
- Recalling an event
- Context cues
- Reconstructing memories
- Misinformation effect
- Source monitoring, reality monitoring
27Forgetting When Memory Lapses
- Retention the proportion of material retained
- Recall
- Recognition
- Relearning
- Ebbinghauss Forgetting Curve
28Figure 7.16 Ebbinghaus forgetting curve for
nonsense syllables
29Figure 7.17 Recognition versus recall in the
measurement of retention
30Why Do We Forget?
- Ineffective Encoding
- Decay theory
- Interference theory
- Proactive
- Retroactive
31Figure 7.19 Retroactive and proactive
interference
32Figure 7.20 Estimates of the prevalence of
childhood physical and sexual abuse
33Retrieval Failure
- Encoding Specificity
- Transfer-Appropriate Processing
- Repression
- Authenticity of repressed memories?
- Memory illusions
- Controversy
34Figure 7.22 The prevalence of false memories
observed by Roediger and McDermott (1995)
35The Physiology of Memory
- Biochemistry
- Alteration in synaptic transmission
- Hormones modulating neurotransmitter systems
- Protein synthesis
- Neural circuitry
- Localized neural circuits
- Reusable pathways in the brain
- Long-term potentiation
36The Physiology of Memory
- Anatomy
- Anterograde and Retrograde Amnesia
- Cerebral cortex, Prefrontal cortex, Hippocampus,
- Dentate gyrus, Amygdala, Cerebellum
37Figure 7.23 The anatomy of memory
38Figure 7.25 Retrograde versus anterograde amnesia
39Are There Multiple Memory Systems?
- Declarative vs. Procedural
- Semantic vs. Episodic
- Prospective vs. Retrospective
40Figure 7.26 Theories of independent memory
systems
41Improving Everyday Memory
- Engage in adequate rehearsal
- Distribute practice and minimize interference
- Emphasize deep processing and transfer-appropriate
processing - Organize information
- Use verbal mnemonics
- Use visual mnemonics