Title: Memory Chapter 7
1MemoryChapter 7
2Memory
- Studying Memory
- An Information-Processing Model
- Two Memory Tracks
- Building Memories
- Encoding Getting Information In
- Storage Retaining Information
- Retrieval Getting Information Out
3Memory
- Forgetting
- Encoding Failure
- Storage Decay
- Retrieval Failure
4Memory
- Memory Construction
- Misinformation and Imagination Effects
- Source Amnesia
- Childrens Eyewitness Recall
- Repressed or Constructed Memories of Abuse?
- Improving Memory
5- Memory is the persistence of learning over time
through the encoding, storage and retrieval of
information
6Building a Memory
- To remember any information or experience
requires - Encoding getting information into our brain
- Storage retaining the encoded information
- Retrieval getting the information back out of
memory storage
7An Information-Processing Model
- A model of memory based on a computer (Atkinson
Shiffrin, 1968) - Experience is first recorded, for just a moment,
as a sensory memory - Information is processed into short-term memory,
encoded through rehearsal - Holds a few items briefly
- Information moves to long-term memory for later
retrieval
8Updates to the I-P Model
- Some memories are formed through unconscious
processing, without our awareness - Working memory a view of short-term memory that
stresses conscious, active processes - Working memory is not just a storage shelf, but
an active desktop for linking new and old
information
9Two-Track Processing Automatic vs. Effortful
- We automatically process vast amounts of everyday
information - We remember new and important information through
effortful processing
10Automatic Processing
- We automatically process information about
- Space
- The definition was at the top of the right page
- Time
- I went to the store before lunch
- Frequency
- This is the third time Ive seen her today!
11Effortful Processing
- Requires close attention and effort
- Memory can be improved through rehearsal, the
conscious repetition of information - Rehearsal was the subject of one of many studies
of memory by Hermann Ebbinghaus
12Ebbinghauss Experiment
- Studied his own learning and forgetting
- Used lists of nonsense syllables
- JIH, BAZ, FUB, YOX, SUJ, DAX, VUM, etc.
- Tested his memory for the list every day.
- The more he practiced out loud on day 1, the less
time needed to relearn it on day 2
13Effortful Processing
- Spacing effect we remember better if study or
practice is spread over time - Cramming is less effective!
- Testing effect repeated quizzing of previously
studied material also helps
14Serial Position
- Serial position effect We remember the first and
last items in a list best
15Facts vs. Skills
- H.M. and others with certain traumatic brain
injuries cannot form new explicit memories - Cannot learn new facts
- However, they can learn new skills
16Two-Track Memory
- Implicit memory retaining skills or
conditioning, often without conscious awareness - Explicit memory memories of facts and personal
events that can be consciously retrieved
17Two-Track Memory
18Sleep and Memory
- Sleep supports memory consolidation
- During sleep, the hippocampus and cortex display
rhythmic patterns of activity, as if
communicating with each other - The brain may be replaying the days
experiences as it transfers them to the cortex
for long-term storage
19Building Memories
- Encoding Getting Information In
- Storage Retaining Information
- Retrieval Getting Information Out
20Encoding Meaning
- We may encode meaning rather than raw information
- When asked to recall text, we often report the
meaning, or gist, rather than the raw text - It can be difficult to remember things without a
meaningful context
21Encoding Images
- We can more easily remember things we can process
visually as well as meaningfully - Old Bailey (court in London)--Glen Bailey
- Memorable sentences often evoke powerful imagery,
or mental pictures - HOMESthe great lakes
- On Old Olympus' Towering Top, A Finn And German
Viewed Some Hopsthe cranial nerves - Olfactory, Optic, Oculomotor, Trochlear,
Trigeminal, Abducens, Facial, Vestibulocochlear,
Glossopharyngeal, Vagus, Spinal Accessory,
Hypoglossal
22Sensory Memory
- Storage is extremely short, especially for visual
sensory memory - Study Sperling (1960) flashed nine letters for
1/20th of a second. - Sensory memory made the letters momentarily
available for encoding.
23Short-Term Memory Duration
- Study Peterson (1959) presented 3-letter
strings and prevented rehearsal - Result letters 50 gone at 3 seconds, 90 gone
at 12 seconds. - Conclusionwithout rehearsaldoesnt last long
24Storage Capacities
- Short-term memory capacity is limited
- The Magical Number Seven, plus or minus two
(George Miller, 1956) - 7 digits or 7 chunks of information
- Long-term memory seems to have no limit and can
endure for a lifetime
25How Does the Brain Store Memory?
- Memory is not stored like books in a library, in
neat, precise locations. - Rather, different aspects of a memory are
assigned to various groups of neurons. - Thus, to understand how memory works, we must
study the brain
26Synaptic Changes
- Synapses are the sites where the signal from one
neuron is received by another - Experience modifies the brains neural network
increased activity in a pathway strengthens
connections between the neurons involved
27Synaptic Changes
- Kandel and Schwartz (1982) classically
conditioned sea slugs to withdraw their tail when
squirted with water (with electric shock). - As the slug learned, serotonin was released into
certain synapses. These synapses then become more
sensitive and able to transmit signals more
effectively.
28Synaptic Changes
- Long-Term Potentiation (LTP) An increase in a
synapses firing potential. A neural basis for
learning and memory
29Stress-Related Memories
- Excitement of stress can enhance memories.
- Stress ? hormones ? more available glucose to
fuel brain activity ? signals brain something
important has happened - Do you suppose that is why the pilot at Nellis
AFB had found it much easier to count air craft
on the ground when he made high speed-low
altitude runs over airfields - in hostile North Vietnam
- than in peaceful England?
30Flashbulb Memories
- Emotion-triggered hormone changes help explain
flashbulb memories, unusually clear memories of
an emotionally significant moment or event - Do you remember exactly where they were on
September 11, 2001?
31Retrieval Getting Information Out
- Evidence that something has been remembered
- The item can be recalled, on an essay exam
- The item can be recognized, as on a
multiple-choice test - Recognition memory is quick and vast
- Relearning the item may be easier than it was the
first time
32Retrieval Cues
- Memories are linked together in the brain, in a
storage web of associations. - These associations can serve as retrieval cues,
any stimuli (events, feelings, places, etc.)
linked to a specific memory - We havent been at the GOP (Garden of Paradise)
but thinking backAl was at the cash register on
that occasion. - Weve not been to Skewers for a couple years-but
Hani showed us to our table. - The more retrieval cues youve encoded, the
better chance of finding a path to retrieve the
memory
33Context Effects
- Returning to the context where you experienced
something can prime your memory of it - Godden and Baddeley (1975) had scuba divers learn
lists of words on land or underwater, and then
attempt to recall them in the same or different
context
34Context Effects
- Sometimes being in a similar context to one
previously experienced can trigger the eerie
feeling of déjà vu (Ive seen this before) - This can happen when the current situation is
loaded with retrieval cues that remind us of
earlier, similar experiences - Where was I went I originally learned this
particular materialsin class or sitting at home
35Moods and Memories
- Mood-congruent memory we more easily recall
experiences that are consistent with the current
(good or bad) mood - If we are in a good mood, we tend to remember
good experiences - Teen ratings of their parents are tightly linked
to the teens current mood - If your kid rates you as a parent after waking up
grouchy, what kind of rating will he make?
36Forgetting
- Jill Price is unable to forget anything.
- Why might this be a problem?
37Seven Sins of Memory (Daniel Schacter, 1999)
- Sins of forgetting and retrieval, problems with
the way memory works - Absent-mindedness inattention to detail leads
to encoding failure - Transience memory loss as unused information
fades - Blocking inability to access stored information
38Seven Sins of Memory (Daniel Schacter, 1999)
- Sins of distortion
- Misattribution confusing the source of
information - Suggestibility e.g., asking a leading question
influences answer and subsequent memory - Bias belief-colored recollections. Current
feelings may alter a memory. - Sin of intrusion
- Persistence unwanted memories (e.g., PTSD)
39Encoding Failure
- We cannot remember what we have not encoded
40Storage Decay
- Forgetting is initially rapid, and then levels
off - People who had studied Spanish in high school but
not after were tested on vocabulary recall - One explanation may be a gradual fading of the
memory trace, the physical changes in the brain
as a memory forms
41Retrieval Failure
- We can sometimes fail to retrieve a memory
because we dont have enough information to
access the pathway to it
42Interference
- Interference the blocking of recall as old or
new learning disrupts the recall of other
memories - Learning new passwords may interfere with
remembering older ones - Learning an hour before sleep can be good because
of less interference (but still need rehearsal)
43Forgetting
- Forgetting, the loss of information in between
sensation and retrieval, can occur at any stages - Sensory memory
- Short term memory
- Long term memory
44Repressed Memories
- Freud argued that we repress, painful or
unacceptable memories to minimize anxiety - He argued that these repressed memories linger,
and can be retrieved by some later cue or therapy - Today, many memory researchers think repression
rarely, if ever, occurs
45Memory Construction
- Every time we replay a memory, we replace the
original with a slightly modified version - What implications does this have for everyday
life? - My wife and I can have very different memories of
an event that weve both experience - And that divergence may grow over time
46Misinformation
- Misinformation effect a memory that has been
corrupted by misleading information - Loftus and Palmer (1974) has subjects watch a
film of a traffic accident. - How fast were the cars going when they smashed
into each other? - or
- How fast were the cars going when they hit each
other?
47Misinformation
- People who were asked smashed version reported
higher speeds - A week later, they were more likely to (falsely)
recall seeing broken glass
48False Memory and Eyewitness Testimony
- Even hearing a vivid retelling of an event can
implant false memories - Sample of 200 convicts later proven innocent by
DNA testing - 79 misjudged based on faulty eyewitness
identification - Leading questions (Did you hear loud noises)
can lead to false memories
49Imagination and Memories
- Even imagining fake actions and events can create
false memories - College students were asked to imaging specific
childhood events (like breaking a window with
their hand). 25 later recalled the event as
actually having happened. - Possible cause visualizing something and
actually perceiving it activate similar brain
areas
50Source Amnesia
- Source amnesia faulty memory for how, when, or
where information was learned or imagined - Sometimes experienced by songwriters and authors,
who may unintentionally plagiarize something
51Childrens Eyewitness Recall
- How can jurors decide cases in which childrens
memories of sexual abuse are the only evidence? - When 3 year-olds were asked to show on a doll
where a pediatrician had touched them, 55
pointed to the genitals or anus, even though the
doctor had not touched them there - Use non-leading questions soon after the event,
in language the child can understand
52Repressed or Constructed Memories of Abuse
- Two tragedies concerning adult recollections of
childhood abuse - When people dont believe abuse survivors who
share their secret - When truly innocent people are falsely accused
- What about clinicians who help people recover
memories of abuse?
53Guidelines for Thinking about Recovered Memories
of Sexual Abuse
- Sexual abuse happens
- Injustice happens
- Forgetting happens
- Recovered memories are commonplace
- Memories of things happening before age 3 are
unreliable (Infantile amnesia) - Memories recovered under hypnosis of under the
influence of drugs are especially unreliable - Memories, whether real or false, can be
emotionally upsetting
54Horror Carves a Memory
- The most common response to a traumatic
experience is not to banish the experience into
the unconscious. - Rather, such experiences are typically etched on
the mind as vivid, persistent, haunting memories.
55Tips for Improving Memory
- Study repeatedly
- Space study sessions apart
- Spend more time rehearsing or actively thinking
about the material - Make the material personally meaningful
- Activate retrieval cues
- Minimize interference
- Sleep more
- Test your knowledge, both to rehearse it and to
find out what you dont know