Title: PowerPoint-Pr
1?
Cognitive Psychology Spring 2005 -Discussion
Section-
2Cognitive functions
Emotion Motivation Action
Categorization
- Reasoning, problem-solving
3Full plate
- Finishing up memory issues
- Memory for General knowledge
- Intro to Categories
- 7 sins
- Rosch Mervis
- Nickerson Adams
- Exam Review
4Repressed memories
- A hot issue since the mid 90s. Number of
- Cases exloded. ? Into the thousands.
- People have been sued and convicted
- Of ghastly crimes (often involving relatives)
- Usually based on concept of repression
(Introduced by Freud).
5Repressed memories
- While it is impossible to tell in an invididual
case, some things are very troubling...
- Scientific concept of Repression is extremely
shaky. No evidence that it can happen. In fact,
the opposite seems to be true (PTSD)
- It has been shown that very vivid memory can be
implanted into the minds of both adults and
children. The subjects cant discriminate real
vs. implanted memories.
- The process of recovery (recovery therapy) is
very similar to the process used for artificial
implantation.
- Evidently wrong recovered memories seem to be
progressive, ? the reports of the abuse get more
and more severe over time.
- People who solidly claim that they were abducted
by space aliens and similarly outrageous stories
usually have bad source memory.
6Memory for general knowledge
- Basic distinction Episodic vs. Semantic.
Endel Tulving
State, Chicago ) ?
Repetition with invariant core
Knowing Facts, Knowledge
Ate, Breakfast?
Recall of Personal experiences
7Memory for general knowledge
Networks, Feature lists, etc. Very 70s and 80s
style. Inspired by Computer science
- Connectionist models, neural networks
90s, Neuroscience inspired
8Memory for general knowledge
-Spread of activation -Nodes -Semantic
priming -RT based studies -Typicality
Semantic network
Hierarchical
- Memory as a linked feature list
- Every concept consists of a set of elements
(features) - There are defining and characteristic features
- The more defining features, the easier. Explains
category size effect (abstractness)
9Memory for general knowledge
- A central psychological theory
- Combines working memory, declarative and
procedural memory. - Nodes, Production rules
- Conditions, actions
- Activated production rules create nodes
John Anderson
10Memory for general knowledge
- Contain fixed slots and variable content
- Questionnaire (template) model of memory
- Schema for routine events
- Allows inferences, leaving things unsaid.
Problem Intrusions.
11Memory for general knowledge
- Parallel processing
- Learning (unobserved)
- Layers (Input, Processing, Output)
- Nodes and Links
- Weights
- Increasingly popular, powerful
- Hard do damage, robust ? plausible
James McClelland
12Life without categories?
13? Categories have tremendous utility for
organisms.
? Categories make cognition efficient, language
possible.
? Mistakes in Categorization have serious
consequences.
14The concept of a category
15More realistically...
16The seven sins of memory by Dan Schacter
17What are the seven sins?
- Pride
- Envy
- Gluttony
- Lust
- Anger
- Greed
- Sloth
- Transience
- Absentmindedness
- Blocking
- Misattribution
- Suggestibility
- Bias
- Persistence
18Take home from seven sins
A central paper. You should be able to
- Transience
- Absentmindedness
- Blocking
- Misattribution
- Suggestibility
- Bias
- Persistence
- Know empirical evidence of their reality
- Explain the adaptive system they derive from.
19Nickerson Adams
20Nickerson Adams
1 c
21Nickerson Adams
1 ?
22Nickerson Adams
- Familiarity does not guarantee retention.
- Even if there were literally thousands of
presentations of the information.
- Crucial are importance, which generally leads to
the deployment of attention.
- In the absence of these, memory is poor.
- People are not necessarily aware of this.
Introspection is a bad measure of memory for
everyday objects.
23Nickerson Adams
? Study tip Try to think that the course
material is important and pay attention. Try to
care. That way, memory will naturally be much
better than if you just read/hear the stuff.
24Rosch Mervis
- Then
- Typicality effects in categorization
Rosch
Mervis
Louisville
Berkeley
Now
-Psychology of Meditation -Buddhist
Psychology -Eastern Religions, Embodiment
-Williams Syndrome -Genetic Neuropsychology
25Review for midterm
- 2nd midterm is on next Monday, as scheduled
- Topics are basically Memory and Categorization
- Try to study on the weekend. Email me for
questions
- Material from Lecture, Book, Discussion section
and papers. Look online for my slides.
- Dont panic, it could be worse.
26Concepts to know
- Interference
- Proactive vs. Retroactive
1
2
1
2
- Explicitness
- Explicit vs. Implicit
Bla
27Concepts to know
-Context effect -State dependent learning -Cues!
28Concepts to know
- Working memory structured STM
Central executive
Knowing how to...
Knowing that...
Implicit
Explicit
Knowing
Vivid Recall
29Concepts to know
30Topics to know
31Short term memory
Coding, Capacity, Retention duration, etc.
Serial position effects (primacy, recency, use).
Mnemonic strategies Chunking, rehearsal.
Working memory
Inferference (Proactive, retroactive)
Memory search (serial, exhaustive)
32Long term memory
Coding, Capacity, Retention duration, etc.
Levels of processing theory
Forgetting Decay, Interference, Overwriting
Encoding specificity State-dependent learning,
Context effects, spacing, cues, mood dependent
learning.
33Autobiographical memory
-Flashbulb memory (Vivid, yet not more accurate)
-Eyewitness testimony (Constructive, Post hoc)
-Repressed memories (Controversial, doubtful)
-Amnesia (Symptoms)
34Memory for general knowledge
- Dichotomies
- Implicit vs. Explicit memory
- Declarative vs. Procedural memory
- Semantic vs. Episodic memory
- Models
- Hierarchical model
- ACT model
- Connectionist model
- Feature comparison model
- Scripts
- Schemata
35Problematic concepts
Implicit memory vs. explicit memory
- Main differenceExplicit memory is verbal, can
be verbalized. - Implicit memory is nonverbal, cannot be verbalized
- To noteStrictly speaking, implicit or
explicit are ways to probe memory, not
necessarily properties of the system itself! - Even if, the systems are not symmetric. Semantic
memory is NOT implicit.
36Problematic concepts
Serial position effects
Primacy and Recency effect in recalling lists
Usage Evidence for difference between STM and LTM
Primacy LTM
Recency STM
37Problematic concepts
Declarative memory
NOT a memory for specific events.
Conceptually, its everything in memory that can
be verbalized. A super-category including both
episodic and semantic memory. It is EXPLICIT.
38Problematic concepts
Procedural memory
NOT memory for routine activities like restaurant
visits. Confusion with Scripts.
Procedural memory cannot be verbalized!
It contains information about actions and their
sequences. Know how (to)
39Good luck!