Title: MEMORY Chapter 9
1MEMORYChapter 9
2Gabby Hopeful Doc Wheezy Scaredy Sleepy Happy
Stubby Puffy Pop Dopey Bashful Sniffy Lazy Wish
ful Shorty Sloppy Droopy Teach
Grumpy Smiley Clumsy Bob Cheerful Jumpy Puf
fy Sneezy Shy
3Happy
Sneezy
Dopey
Doc
Bashful
Grumpy
Sleepy
two Ds, two Ss three Emotions Doc, Dopey,
Sleepy, Sneezy, Grumpy, Happy Bashful
4The Phenomenon of Memory
- Memory is any indication that learning has
persisted over time. It is our ability to encode,
store and retrieve information.
The Persistence of Memory Salvador Dalí, 1931
5Interesting Memory Phenomena
- Flashbulb (Episodic) Memory clear, strong,
persistent memory usually caused by a
unique/highly emotional moment. - Not free from errors, however
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7Interesting Memory Phenomena
- Eidetic (Photographic) Memory the research is
mixed as to whether this is a real phenomenon or
not
Daniel Tammet (Brain Man) - Synesthesia
Kim Peek the real Rain Man
http//abcnews.go.com/2020/video/brain-man-explain
s-synaesthesia-10765484
8Basic Tasks of Memory
Monitor (Retrieval)
Keyboard (Encoding)
Disk (Storage)
9Information Processing
- The Atkinson-Schiffrin three-stage model of
memory includes a) sensory memory, b) short-term
memory, and c) long-term memory.
10Atkinson-Shiffrin Three-Stage Processing Model
- Sensory memory has 2 parts
- Iconic store visual information
- Echoic store sound information
- Since we cannot focus all the sensory information
in the environment, we select information that is
important to us (through selective attention).
11Working Memory
12Encoding Getting Information In
How We Encode
- Some information (route to your school) is
automatically processed. - However, new or unusual information (friends new
cell-phone number) requires attention and effort.
13Automatic/Parallel Processing
We process an enormous amount of information
effortlessly, such as the following
- Space While reading a textbook, you
automatically encode the place of a picture on a
page. - Time We unintentionally note the events that
take place in a day. - Frequency You effortlessly keep track of things
that happen to you.
14Effortful/Serial Processing
Committing novel information to memory requires
effort just like learning a concept from a
textbook. Such processing leads to durable and
accessible memories.
15Rehearsal
Effortful learning usually requires rehearsal
(conscious repetition). Ebbinghaus studied
rehearsal by using nonsense syllables TUV YOF
GEK XOZ
Hermann Ebbinghaus (1850-1909)
16Rehearsal
The more times the nonsense syllables were
practiced on Day 1, the fewer repetitions were
required to remember them on Day 2.
17Memory Effects
- Next-in-line-Effect When you are so anxious
about being next that you cannot remember what
the person just before you in line says, but you
can recall what other people around you say. - Spacing Effect We retain information better when
we rehearse over time. This is why long-term
studying is better than cramming!!! - Serial Position Effect When your recall is
better for first and last items on a list, but
poor for middle items.
18Spacing Effect
- Distributing rehearsal (spacing effect) is better
than practicing all at once. Robert Frosts poem
could be memorized with fair ease if spread over
time.
ACQUAINTED WITH THE NIGHT Robert Frost I have
been one acquainted with the night.I have walked
out in rain and back in rain.I have outwalked
the furthest city light.
19Serial Position Effect
20Encoding Meaning
Whale
Q Did the word begin with a capital letter?
Structural Encoding
Shallow
Q Did the word rhyme with the word
weight?
Phonemic Encoding
Intermediate
Q Would the word fit in the sentence?
He met a __________ in the street.
Semantic Encoding
Deep
21Results
We tend to remember things better and easier when
we attach relevance and meaning of that
information to ourselves.
22Visual Encoding
- Mental pictures (imagery) are a powerful aid to
effortful processing, especially when combined
with semantic encoding.
Showing adverse effects of tanning and smoking
in a picture may be more powerful than simply
talking about it.
23Mnemonics
- Imagery is at the heart of many memory aids.
Mnemonic techniques use vivid imagery in aiding
memory.
Method of Loci using visual place cues (either
real or imagined) to help remember topics.
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25Organizing Information for Encoding
- Break down complex information into broad
concepts and further subdivide them into
categories and subcategories.
- Chunking
- Hierarchy
26Chunking
- Organizing items into a familiar, manageable
unit. Try to remember the numbers below.
1-7-7-6-1-4-9-2-1-8-1-2-1-9-4-1
If you are well versed with American history,
chunk the numbers together and see if you can
recall them better. 1776 1492 1812 1941.
27Chunking
Acronyms are another way of chunking information
to remember it.
HOMES Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie,
Superior PEMDAS Parentheses, Exponent,
Multiply, Divide, Add, Subtract ROY G. BIV
Red, Orange, Yellow, Green, Blue, Indigo, Violet
28Hierarchy
Complex information broken down into broad
concepts and further subdivided into categories
and subcategories. (Which is why I took notes in
outline form when I was a student).
29Storage Retaining Information
Storage is at the heart of memory. Three stores
of memory are shown below
Sensory Memory
Working Memory
Long-term Memory
Encoding
Events
Retrieval
Encoding
Retrieval
30Sensory Memory
Sensory Memory
Working Memory
Long-term Memory
Encoding
Events
Retrieval
Encoding
Retrieval
31Sensory Memory
The exposure time for the stimulus is so
small that items cannot be rehearsed.
R G TF M QL Z S
The longer the delay, the greater the memory loss.
32Sensory Memories
The duration of sensory memory varies for the
different senses.
33Working Memory
Sensory Memory
Working Memory
Long-term Memory
Encoding
Events
Retrieval
Encoding
Retrieval
34Working Capacity
Working memory, the new name for short-term
memory, has a limited capacity (72) and a short
duration (20 seconds).
Ready?
M U T G I K T L R S Y P
You should be able to recall 72 letters.
35Chunking
The capacity of the working memory may be
increased by chunking.
FBI TWA CIA IBM 4 chunks
36Long-Term Memory
Sensory Memory
Working Memory
Long-term Memory
Encoding
Events
Retrieval
Encoding
Retrieval
37Long-Term Memory
- Unlimited capacity store. Estimates on capacity
range from 1000 billion to 1,000,000 billion bits
of information
AP Psych Rocks!
WOW!
The Clarks nutcracker can locate 6,000 caches
of buried pine seeds during winter and spring.
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39Memory Feats
40Memory Stores
Feature Sensory Memory Working Memory LTM
Encoding Echoic Chunking Semantic
Capacity 15 items 72 Chunks Unlimited
Duration 1/4 second 1 minute Years
41Stress Hormones Memory
- Heightened emotions (stress-related or otherwise)
make for stronger memories of specific events.
However, continued stress may disrupt memory
(which is another reason why cramming the night
before doesnt really work).
42Storing Implicit Explicit Memories
- Explicit Memory (declarative memory-conscious)
refers to facts and experiences that one can
consciously know and declare. - Implicit memory (procedural memory-unconscious)
involves learning an action while the individual
does not know or declare what she knows.
43Hippocampus
Hippocampus a neural center in the
limbic system is the site of temporary
processing of explicit memories.
44Anterograde Amnesia
After losing his hippocampus in surgery, the
patient remembered everything before the
operation but cannot make new memories. We call
this anterograde amnesia.
- Anterograde
- Amnesia
- - old memory intact but loss of new memories
No New Memories
Memory Intact
Surgery
Retrograde Amnesia can form new memories but
loss of old memories occurs
45Cerebellum
Cerebellum a neural center in the hindbrain
that processes implicit memories.
46Retrieval Getting Information Out
Retrieval refers to getting information out of
the memory store.
47Measures of Memory
In recognition, the person must identify an item
amongst other choices (a multiple-choice test
requires recognition).
- Name the capital of France.
- Brussels
- Rome
- London
- Paris
48Measures of Memory
In recall, the person must retrieve information
using effort (a fill-in-the blank test requires
recall).
- The capital of
- France is ______.
49Measures of Memory
In relearning, the individual shows how much time
(or effort) is saved when learning material for
the second time.
List Jet Dagger Tree Kite Silk Frog Ring
List Jet Dagger Tree Kite Silk Frog Ring
Original Trials
Relearning Trials
1 day later
Saving
X 100
Relearning Trials
10
5
X 100
10
50
It took 10 trials to learn this list
It took 5 trials to learn the list
50Retrieval Cues
Memories are held in storage by a web of
associations. These associations are like anchors
that help retrieve memory.
water
smell
hose
Fire Truck
fire
truck
smoke
heat
red
51Priming
To retrieve a specific memory from the web of
associations, you must first activate one of the
strands that leads to it. This process is called
priming (which is related to implicit memory).
- __ h __ p __ __ __ k 3) __ o g __ y __ __ n
- __ c __ __ __ us 4) __ l __ __ a t __
52Context Effects
Scuba divers recall more words underwater if they
learned the list underwater, while they recall
more words on land if they learned that list on
land (this is why Walton always offers the SAT).
53Context Effects
- After learning to move a mobile by kicking,
infants most strongly respond when retested in
the same context rather than in a different
context.
54Déja Vu
- Déja Vu means I've experienced this before.
Cues from the current situation may unconsciously
trigger retrieval of an earlier similar
experience.
55State-Dependent Memory
- The idea of state-dependent
- memory proposes that internal
- cues are also a factor in
- remembering (people remember
- better when their internal states
- matches when they
- learned/experienced the
- information).
- Mood-congruence
- Situations/feelings
- Chemically altered states of consciousness
56Daniel Schacters 7 Sins of Memory Failure
- Absent-mindedness encoding failure by lack of
attention to detail - Transience storage decay over time
- Blocking cannot get to stored info
- Misattribution confusing the source with
something/someone else - Suggestibility misinformation causes
misidenitification/false memories - Bias personal beliefs affect memories
- Persistence haunted by unwanted memories
forgetting
distortion
intrusion
57Encoding Failure
We cannot remember what we do not encode.
Forgetting an inability to retrieve information
due to poor encoding, storage, or retrieval.
58Which penny is real?
59Storage Decay
Poor durability of stored memories leads to their
decay. Ebbinghaus showed this with his forgetting
curve.
60Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve
61Retrieval Failure
- Although the information is retained in the
memory store, it cannot be accessed.
Tip-of-the-tongue (TOT) is a retrieval failure
phenomenon. Given a cue (What makes blood cells
red?) the subject says the word begins with an H
(hemoglobin).
62Proactive (forget new) and Retroactive ( forget
new) Interference
- Learning some new information may disrupt
- retrieval of other information.
63Retroactive Interference
Sleep prevents retroactive interference.
Therefore, it leads to better recall.
64Motivated Forgetting
- Motivated Forgetting People unknowingly revise
their memories. - Repression A Freudian/psychodynamic defense
mechanism that banishes anxiety-arousing
thoughts, feelings, and memories from
consciousness.
Sigmund Freud
65Why do we forget?
- Forgetting can occur at any memory stage. We
filter, alter, or lose much information during
these stages.
66Memory Construction
- While tapping into our memories, we filter or
fill in missing pieces of information to make our
recall more coherent.
- Misinformation Effect Incorporating misleading
information into one's memory of an event. - Imagination Effect Repeated imaginations of
things/events can create false memories
67Loftus Palmer MemoryHypothesis Methodology
- Hypothesis People will remember a car accident
differently if given different language cues
(words) about the accident - Students watched a film of two cars colliding
- Collision was moderate with no broken glass
- Asked questions about speed
68Loftus Palmer Results
VERB MEAN ESTIMATE OF SPEED (MPH)
Smashed 40.8
Collided 39.3
Bumped 38.1
Hit 34.0
Contacted 31.8
- People reported the fastest speeds if the
researchers had used the word smashed in the
question
69Loftus Palmer Results Implications
- One week later, subjects were asked if they had
seen broken glass - 32 of subjects asked the smashed question said
yes 14 of subjects asked the hit question
said yes - People remember things differently depending on
the language used to describe an event (smashed
versus hit) - This demonstrates the Misinformation effect
70False Memories
- Source Amnesia (a.k.a. source misattribution).
Attributing an event to the wrong source that we
experienced, heard, read, or imagined. - Repressed or Constructed?
- Some adults actually do forget childhood episodes
of abuse. - False Memory Syndrome
- A condition in which a persons identity and
relationships center around a false but strongly
believed memory of a traumatic experience, which
is sometimes induced by well-meaning therapists. - http//www.msnbc.msn.com/id/39166049/ns/us_newsthe
_new_york_times/?GT143001
71 Memories of Abuse
- Are memories of abuse repressed or
constructed? - Many psychotherapists believe that early
childhood sexual abuse results in repressed
memories. - However, other psychologists question such
beliefs and think that such memories may
sometimes be constructed (power of suggestion).
72Types of Neurobiological Disorders that can lead
to Memory Distortion
- Anterograde Amnesia old information remembered
but new memory formation not possible (lose new
memory) - Retrograde Amnesia can form new memories but
loss of old memories occurs (lose old memory) - Infantile Amnesia lack of many but not all
memories before the age of 3 or 4 (and is
completely normal) - Alzheimers Disease
73Improving Memory
- Study repeatedly to boost long-term recall.
- Spend more time rehearsing or actively thinking
about the material. - Make material personally meaningful.
- Use mnemonic devices
- Activate retrieval cues mentally recreate the
situation and mood. - Recall events while they are fresh before you
encounter misinformation. - Minimize interference
- Test your own knowledge.
- Rehearse and then determine
- what you do not yet know.