Title: Memory retrieval, forgetting and study strategies
1Memory retrieval, forgetting and study strategies
2- Which is easier a multiple-choice question or a
short-answer essay question-and why? - Have you ever forgetten where you left your key,
to meet with your boyfriend/girlfriend or your
sister birthday? - Why we cannot remember having our parents feed us
during infancy, taking our first steps, our first
sentences? - Which periods of life tend to stand out in
memory? - Is it possible to increase our recall of
information?
3Process of Retrieval(or reconstucting the past)
Retrieval Cue
- Retrieval cues come from a variety of sources
- External (environment)
- You leave a note for yourself
- Teacher asks you a question.
- Internal
- You remind yourself
- As we will see, this process is not so simple
Association between cue and memory
Target Memory
4Measures of Memory(How we retrieve the contents
of memory)
- Explicit memory
- - recall
- - recognition
- Implicit memory
- -priming
- -relearning
5Explicit memory
- Recall
- - the individual must retrieve previously
learned information - (an essay on the test)
- Recognition
- - the individual only has to recognize learned
items - (a multiple-choice test)
- Recall and recognition mostly refer to the types
of tests we use to measure memory. - In almost all laboratory experiments there are
study and test phases.
6Memory Recall
- Free recall
- No cues are provided
- e.g., Tell me about what you did during Spring
Break. - Recall the items in any order
- Cued recall
- Cues are provided but the target information is
not present in the cue. - e.g. On your first day of Spring Break you drank
a lot of alcohol and
7Examples of recall that you might recognize
- Free recall
- What is cognitive science?
- Cued recall
- The four major lobes of the brain are
- Fr____, Pa____, Oc____, Te_____
- (Frontal, Parietal, Occipital, Temporal)
8Memory Recognition
- Recognition
- In some tests, distractors are presented along
with target. - Identify the target from the distractors.
- In other tests, one item (either target or
distractor) is presented by itself. - Yes or No, do you recognize this item?
9Memory Recognition
Study Phase
10Memory Recognition
Test Phase (with distractors)
Did you see any of these faces earlier?
- In recognition tasks, people must identify
targets - and avoid distractors
11Memory Recognition
Test Phase (single item)
Yes or No did you study this face earlier? The
famous pick up line Have we met before?
12Example of recognition that you might recognize
- The cell that is specialized for receiving and
- transmitting a neural impulse.
- a. Synapse
- b. Myelin
- c. Neuron
- d. Node
13Implicit memory
- Priming
- -the individual reads or listens to
- information and is later tested
- Relearning method (or saving method)
- -compare the time required to relearn material
with the time used in the initial learning of the
material
14Priming
15Relearning
Exposure to information
Relearn same task later
Task 1
Task 2
16Do you remember this concept?
- Have you tried to remember someone s name,
convinced that you knew it, but were unable to
recall it no matter how hard you tried? - (Tip-of-the-Tongue Phenomenon)
17What kind of memory is it?
- Each of us remember that Princessa Diana had been
killed in a car crash, World War II began in
1941... - (Flashbulb Memory)
18What kind of memory is it?
- The children were kidnapped at gun-point on a
school bus in California, then buried underground
for 16 hours before escaping? - ( Personal Trauma)
19What kind of memory is it?
- You recall information better, if your mood is
similar at encoding and r?trieval. - (Mood-Congruent Memory)
20Forgetting
21Why Do We Forget?
- Decay theory
- New memories for Old
- Interference theory
22Decay theory...
- ...states that something new is learned, a
neorochemical memory trace is formed, but over
a time this trace tends to fade (?????????)
23New memories for Old...
- ...states that new information can completely
wipe out old information, just as rerecording on
an audiotape or videotape will obliterate(???????)
the original material
24Interference theory...
- ...states that we forget not because memories are
actually lost from storage, but because other
information gets in the way of what we want to
remember
25Retroactive interference
Judy
Julie
Learned first
Learned second
26Proactive Interferance
27Autobiographical memories
- A person s recollections of his or her life
experiences - Childhood amnesia (sometimes called infantile
amnesia)
28Memory and study startegies
29Memory and study startegies
- Pay attention and minimize distraction
- Understand materials rather than rotely
memorize(?????????) - Organize what you put into memory
- Ask yourself questions
- Spread out and consolidate your learning
- Organize your lecture notes
30Memory and study strategies
- Mnemonics - strategies and tricks for
improving memory, such as the use of specific
memory aids for remembering information. - (Mnemosyne was the ancient Greek goddess of
memory)
31Mnemonic strategies
- The method of loci is a mnemonic strategy in
which you develop an image of items to remembered
and store them in familiar locations(loci is
the Latin word for places)
32Mnemonic strategies
- Acronyms is a mnemonic strategy in which you
create a word from the first letters of items to
be remembered - For example The name of Great Lakes Huron,
Ontario, Michigan, Erie, and Superior. - Use the word HOMES
-
33Mnemonic strategies
- The keyword method is also a mnemonic strategy in
which vivid(?????) imagery is attached to
important words. - For example Foreign word is paired with a
common Russian word. Tomato ?????
???????
34References...
- Santrock J.W, (2000). Psychology. New-York MC
Graw Hill, 236-248. - Wade C., Tavris C., (1999). Psychology. Longman,
226-256. - Brandon, (2006). Presentation from Net Work.
- www.zefrank.com/memory/dana (games)
35??????? ?? ????????!