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Debate 1: Does divorce place children at risk

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Debate 1: Does divorce place children at risk? Christy Abdypoor Brand ... 8: Can you trust the Consumer Reports conclusion that psychotherapy is effective? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Debate 1: Does divorce place children at risk


1
  • Debate 1 Does divorce place children at risk?
  • Christy Abdypoor Brand
  • Debate 2 Can sex be an addiction?
  • Christy Brazil Evers
  • Debate 3 Is our sexual behavior based on
    genetics?
  • Christy Fabry Isaac
  • Debate 4 Do religiously committed people have
    greater mental health?
  • Chris Ivie Manawatao
  • Debate 5 Does maximizing prison time reduce
    crime?
  • Chris Markgraf Patterson, Brett
  • Debate 6 Do physically punished children become
    violent adults?
  • Julie Patterson, Lakeshia Rodriguez
  • Debate 7 Are we relying on too much Prozac?

2
Study Sessions!
  • T.A. DAY TIME
  • Christy Thursday 1200 100
  • Chris Tuesday 100 200
  • Julie Thursday 100 200

3
Aoccdrnig to a rscheearch at Cmabrigde
Uinervtisy, it deosn't mttaer in waht oredr the
ltteers in a wrod are, the olny iprmoetnt tihng
is taht the frist and lsat ltteer be at the rghit
pclae. The rset can be a total mses and you can
stll raed it wouthit a porbelm. Tihs is bcuseae
the huamn mnid deos not raed ervey lteter by
istlef, but the wrod as a wlohe.
4
Memory Questions
  • What is your earliest memory?
  • How old were you then?
  • Do you actually recall it or have you been told
    about it?

5
Questions continued
  • Is the memory positive, negative or neutral?
  • What is the name of your first grade teacher?
  • What was one gift you received for your last
    birthday?
  • Are the majority of your memories positive or
    negative?

6
  • What differences can you recall after viewing
    these twins for one minute?

7
(No Transcript)
8
Storage - Short-Term Memory
  • Short-Term Memory
  • limited in duration and capacity
  • magical number 7/-2

9
A Simplified Memory Model
10
Encoding - Getting Information In
11
Encoding - Serial Position Effect
Serial Position Effect-tendency to recall best
the last items in a list
12
Encoding
  • Images, sounds, touch, movement
  • Maximize the sensory modalities you use to retain
    information, combine with meaning
  • Mnemonics
  • memory aids
  • especially those techniques that use vivid
    imagery and organizational devices

13
Mnemonic Devices
  • Major constituents of protoplasm S. P. Cohn
  • King Phillip came over for Genes special variety
  • Newton-gravitation, figs falling from trees
  • Hooke-cells, sickle cells are hook shaped
  • Ray-plants, plants need sun rays

14
Storage - Long-Term Memory
  • Amnesia--the loss of memory
  • Explicit Memory
  • memory of facts and experiences that one can
    consciously know and declare
  • also called declarative memory
  • hippocampus--neural center in limbic system that
    helps process explicit memories for storage
  • Implicit Memory
  • retention independent of conscious recollection
  • also called procedural memory

15
Storage - Long-Term Memory
  • MRI scan of hippocampus (in red)

16
Retrieval - Getting Information Out
  • Recall
  • measure of memory in which the person must
    retrieve information learned earlier
  • as on a fill-in-the blank test
  • Recognition
  • Measure of memory in which the person has only to
    identify items previously learned
  • as on a multiple-choice test

17
Retrieval Cues
  • Mood-congruent Memory
  • tendency to recall experiences that are
    consistent with ones current mood
  • memory, emotions, or moods serve as retrieval
    cues
  • State-dependent Memory
  • what is learned in one state (while one is high,
    drunk, or depressed) can more easily be
    remembered when in same state

18
Clive Wearing
  • http//youtube.com/watch?vxCyvzI2aVUofeaturerel
    ated
  • Anterograde amnesia
  • http//youtube.com/watch?v9BrCBq2FY_Ufeaturerel
    ated
  • Brain dysfunction

19
Forgetting
  • The forgetting curve for Spanish learned in school

20
Forgetting as Interference
  • Learning some items may disrupt retrieval of
    other information
  • Proactive (forward acting) Interference
  • disruptive effect of prior learning on recall of
    new information
  • Retroactive (backwards acting) Interference
  • disruptive effect of new learning on recall of
    old information

21
Forgetting as Interference
22
Improve Your Memory
  • Study repeatedly to boost recall
  • Spend more time rehearsing or actively thinking
    about the material
  • Make material personally meaningful
  • Use mnemonic devices
  • associate with peg words--something already
    stored
  • make up story
  • chunk--acronyms

23
Improve Your Memory
  • Activate retrieval cues--mentally recreate
    situation and mood
  • Recall events while they are fresh-- before you
    encounter misinformation
  • Minimize interference
  • Test your own knowledge
  • rehearse
  • determine what you do not yet know

24
Use the SQ3RPlus method of reading for retention
  • S survey
  • Q question
  • R read
  • R recite
  • R review
  • Plus
  • Write
  • Reflect

25
Watch Where Theres a Will, Theres An A
in FH 122 for more tips.
26
Clive Wearing
  • http//youtube.com/watch?vxCyvzI2aVUofeaturerel
    ated
  • Anterograde amnesia
  • http//youtube.com/watch?v9BrCBq2FY_Ufeaturerel
    ated
  • Brain dysfunction

27
Forgetting
  • Forgetting can occur at any memory stage
  • As we process information, we filter, alter, or
    lose much of it

28
Theories of forgetting Forgetting can
occur at three points along the pathway from
stimulus to memory 1)    faulty
acquisition2)    failure to encode 3)   
retrieval failure
29
Forgetting
  • Forgetting as encoding failure
  • Information never enters long-term memory

30
Retrieval
  • Forgetting can result from failure to retrieve
    information from long-term memory

31
Explanations for this include1.
Decay2. Two Types of Interference 1. Proactive
interference Study biology? study Spanish ?
test in Spanish 2. Retroactive
interference Study biology ? study Spanish ?
test in biology 3. Changes in retrieval cues4.
Motivated forgetting Word of the day
confabulation!
32
2. The unconscious repetition of information for
retention is___ and research shows ___
repetitions are necessary for long term memory.
  • 1. automatic processing, 8
  • 2. rehearsal, 7
  • 3. priming, 7
  • 4. chunking, 8

33
  • USA Memory Championships
  • Blackjack memory trick
  • Dave Farrow, Guiness Record Holder in Memory, 59
    decks of cards, thats 3058 cards!
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