Title: Memory
1Memory
2Considering memory
- Be prepared to interpret, or share your
perspectives on the following quotes. - Whereas all living species have a past, only
humans have a history. - One never steps into the same stream of
consciousness twice. - Most of our memories are really about the
future. - We are the sum of our memoriesChange your
memory and change your identity. - A memory is more atmospheric than accurate, more
an evolving fiction than a sacred text.
3Lets check your memory
- On a sheet of paper, name the 7 Dwarves
- Sleepy, Dopey, Grumpy, Sneezy, Happy, Doc,
Bashful - Was this activity easy or hard?
- What factors affect our memory?
4The Memory ProcessThree Steps
- Encoding
- Processing of info into memory system (typing on
a computer) - Storage
- Retention of encoded material over time (to hit
save) - Retrieval
- Getting the info out of storage (opening a file)
5Encoding, storage or retrieval??
- Continuing to pronounce nuclear as nucular
- A failure of which?
6Three Stage Processing Model(one of two major
theories on memory)
- Sensory Memory
- Short-Term Memory
- Long-Term Memory
7Sensory Memory
- Immediate recording of sensory info
- Split second holding tank
- Most stimulus not encoded- Why?
- Selective Attention
- Sensory Memory registered as
- Iconic (split second vanishing photograph)
- Echoic (4 second sounds)
8Short-Term MemoryAKA Working Memory
- Memory that holds a few items briefly.
- Limit Seven digits/ items (plus or minus 2)
- Info is stored into long-term, or forgotten.
- Lasts 3-12 seconds
- Short-Term, or Working Memory has 3 parts
- Acoustic codes
- Visual Codes
- Semantic Codes
9Long-Term Memory
- The relatively permanent and limitless storehouse
of the memory system.
10Flashbulb MemoryException to 3 Stage theory
- An extreme emotional moment or event
- Somehow branded into Long-Term Memory
- Where were you when?
- 1. You heard about 9/11?
- 2. You had your first kiss?
- 3. You had your first car accident?
11Encoding
- We encode info in two ways
- Automatic Processing
- Effortful Processing
12Encoding
- Automatic Processing
- Unconscious encoding
- Location, time and frequency
- Retracing steps to find your keys
- Also becomes automatic with practice
- Driving to a friends house
13Encoding
- Effortful Processing
- Attention / conscious effort
- Studying for a test
- Through rehearsal, Effortful can become automatic
14Ways of Encoding (activity 9.3)
- Semantic
- encoding of meaning
- Acoustic
- Encoding of sound
- Visual
- Encoding of picture images
15Which is most effective?
16Factors that Influence Encoding
- Spacing Effect
- Encode info better if in increments over time
- Serial Positioning Effect
- Tendency to recall best the first and last items
in a list. - Primacy Effect Remember first words, items
- Recency Effect Remember last items, words
- Next-In-Line Effect
- Dont remember what someone has said if we are
next - Self-Reference Effect
- We encode better when issue relates to us
17With a partner
- List the U.S. presidents.
Washington Taylor Harrison Eisenhower
J.Adams Fillmore Cleveland Kennedy
Jefferson Pierce McKinley L.Johnson
Madison Buchanan T.Roosevelt Nixon
Monroe Lincoln Taft Ford
JQ Adams A.Johnson Wilson Carter
Jackson Grant Harding Reagan
Van Buren Hayes Coolidge Bush
Harrison Garfield Hoover Clinton
Tyler Arthur FD.Roosevelt Bush Jr.
Polk Cleveland Truman Obama
18Encoding StrategiesCan enhance memory
- Mnemonic Devices
- Any learning technique that aids memory
- uses imagery, semantics to remember
- Acronyms
- Parentheses, exponents, multiplication, division,
addition, subtraction - Please excuse my dear aunt Sally.
19Mnemonic Devices
- Peg-Word System
- Assign each item to a number or
- Weave a story matching each item / word to a
number. (Rhyming also helpful)
20Mnemonic Devices
- Chunking
- Organizing items into familiar, manageable units.
- Memorize these numbers-
- 1-4-9-2-1-7-7-6-1-8-1-2-1-9-4-1
- How bout now?
- 1492, 1776, 1812, 1941
21Mnemonic Devices
- Key Word System
- Term Key Word Mental Picture
- Brocas Area Tom Brokaw News cast (talking)
- Parietal Lobe Paraná biting your toe
- Amygdala Amy Old Psycho girlfriend
Fear - Hippocampus ???? ?????
22Mnemonic Devices
- Loci (Location) 500 BC.- Simonides
- Imagine a location (house etc.)
- Imaginary tour each location paired with
specific item
23Choose any mnemonic device (60 seconds)
- Ham
- Pencil
- turkey
- pen
- Check book
- detergent
- football
- glasses
- globe
- Brother
- Laundry
- Map
- Scrabble
- Jeopardy
- pizza
24Storage
- 3 Stage Process of Memory Review
25Storage and Sensory Memory
- Iconic
- visual snapshot of great detail
- lasts only about a second if dont focus on it
- echoic
- sounds lasts three to four seconds (or last
few words) if dont encode
26Storage and Sensory Memory
- George Sterlings Experiment1960
- Flash of screen 1/20 second
- Subjects recalled about ½ of letters
- 3 tones top, middle, bottom played immediately
after visual - Subjects could identify all three
- All nine letters available for recall- only for a
moment
27Storage and Short-Term Memory
- Lasts usually between 3 to 12 seconds.
- Limit 7 (plus or minus two) chunks of
information. - We recall digits better than letters.
28Storage and Long-Term Memory
- long-term memory no known limits
- Rajan recited 31,811 digits of pi.(3hrs. 49
min. / or 3.5/second!) - How? Rhythmic memory melodic or jarring- taps
feet, sways right / left - At 5 years old, memorized the license plates of
parents guests (about 75 cars in ten minutes).
He still remembers the plates to this day. - Numbers only average with names, words
29Shereshevskii 1920s
- Short term memory 70 items
- Forward / Backward / 15 years
- Asylum went mad 15 minutes / 5 years all
memories ran together
30Long-Term Memory
- Remember There is no one single compartment for
memory in our brain. - Long Term-Potentiation (LTP)
- Leading Theory for LTM
- Neural networks strengthen memory
- Neural connections gradually strengthen through
rehearsal over time (memory strengthened) - Nerve cells genes produce synapse strengthening
proteins /enabling LTM formation
31Stress and Memory
- Stress can release hormones that assist in LTM
- Stress can also inhibit effective encoding for
memory
32Types of LTM
33The Hippocampus
- Critical to memory (injury impairment)
- Left Verbal memory
- Right Visual / Locations
- If Library our brain
- Then hippocampus librarian
- Processes LTM, then stores elsewhere in cerebral
cortex - Examples
- Facial recognition temporal lobe
- Landscapes parietal lobe
- Socializing frontal lobe
- Parallel processing for rich mosaic of memory
34Amygdala
- Emotional memories
- Images, smells, sounds
- Examples?
- Hippocampus and Amygdala work together to form
LTM - Hippo conscious memory of event
- Amygdala emotional memory from the senses
35Retrieval
- Recall
- Versus
- Recognition
- Whats the Difference?
36Retrieval Cues(Aid memory..)
- Memory web of associations
- Priming strand or web of associations that
leads to a specific memory
37Priming Effect (2 types)
- Semantic Priming
- A house divided against itself cannot stand..
- Those who deny freedom to others, deserve it not
for themselves - With malice toward none, with charity for all,
with firmness in the right as God gives us to see
the right, let us strive on to finish the work we
are in
38Factors that Influence Retrieval
- Context effect
- Retrieval is more effective when retrieving it in
same location as experienced it - Tip-Of-the-Tongue Effect (TOT)
- Temporary inability to retrieve specific name or
information. - Usually remedied by semantic cues
39What is déjà vu?
- Eerie sense that you have experienced something
before - Explanation current situation cues past
experiences that are very similar but not the
same (your mind gets confused.)
40Other explanations.
- déjà vu
- Biological perspective sensory input follows
several different pathways to higher processing
centers of brain thus one arrives milliseconds
before another separate copies of same
experience - Perceptual experience can be split into two parts
sense of two different experiences (selective
attention) - Implicit familiarity without explicit
recollection
41Conditions that Affect Memory
- Mood-Congruent Theory
- The tendency to recall memories consistent with
our current mood - State-Dependent Theory
- Recalling events encoded while in a particular
state of consciousness. - Example If you hide money while your drunk, you
are more likely to remember where you hid it when
you are intoxicated.
42Conditions that Affect Memory
- Pollyanna Principle
- We tend to remember pleasant experiences over
negative ones - Before, more efficiently, more accurately
- Why?
- We seek out positive experiences
- Faster fading of negative experiences healthy
coping processes in memory - Mild depression negative and positive
experiences fade evenly
43Forgetting
- Forgetting isnt the absence of remembering
its memorys ally, a device that allows the
brain to stay agile and engaged. - Diane Ackerman, An Alchemy of Mind, p. 89
44Three ways we forget
- Encoding Failure
- Storage DecayRetrieval Failure
45Which is the real penny?
46Encoding Failure
- Dont encode what we dont need.
- No encoding / no LTM.
47Storage Decay
- Memory storage decays over time
- Lack of rehearsal accelerates decay
- Ebbinghauss forgetting curve
- Steep decline of retention over first three days,
then levels off
48Ebbinghaus Forgetting Curve
49Retrieval Failure
- 2 Types (Be careful hereits tricky..)
- Proactive Interference
- New info is messed up by the old info
- vs.
- Retroactive Interference
- Old info is messed up by new learning
50Which type of retrieval failure?
When you finally remember this years locker
combination, you forget last years.
If you call your new girlfriend your old
girlfriends name.
51Retrieval Failure
- REPRESSION
- psychoanalytic theory- Freuds theory of
repression - We push away uncomfortable memories
- Contradicts theory that emotions / stress
hormones strengthen memories
52How much of our experience do we remember?
53The truth about memory..
- Memories bend and change over time, and are often
inaccurate!! - Youngest and oldest (around 5 and 75) are most
susceptible - (Frontal lobe matures slowly and and decays
quickly) - Research studies
- Elizabeth Loftus (over 200 experiments)
- How wording influences our memory
- Cornell University- Space Shuttle Disaster
- Recollections on day after and three years later
- 2/3 were totally wrong as to who with, where etc..
54Misinformation EffectWording affects our memory
- About how fast were the vehicles going when they
smashed into each other? - Or
- When they ran into each other?
55Source Amnesia
- Forgetting the source of a memory
- (Where did I hear that?)
- One of the frailest parts of our memory
56Types of Amnesia
- Anterograde Amnesia
- Remember everything before the accident, but not
after. - Often TBI (part of brain?)
- Retrograde Amnesia
- Remember everything after the incident, but not
before.
57Which type of amnesia?