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Combined Lecture Slides, Weeks 04 - 07 Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Spring 2016 Instructor: John Miyamoto Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Next: Lecture 04-1 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 2 There is no lecture file for this date. There was no lecture on this date because it was an exam day. Next: Lecture 04-2 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 4 Sensory Memory, Short-Term Memory & Working Memory Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 04/19/2016: Lecture 04-2 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. To Be Discussed Later UW: Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Memory Systems 6 Outline Overview of memory systems: Sensory Memory This lecture Short-Term Memory / Working Memory (STM / WM) Long-Term Memory (LTM) Later WM LTM Multiple Components Multiple Components What function do these memory systems serve? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Are Memory Systems? 7 What Are Memory Systems? • Memory systems retain perceptions, images, motor patterns, experiences, ideas, thoughts, and intentions that were present at one time but are no longer present. Major Functions of Memory Systems • Store information over a period of time (seconds; minutes; hours; years) • Pass information between different memory systems ♦ Encode information (put information into a long-term storage) ♦ Retrieve memories or previous learning based on relevance or usefulness in current processing. ♦ Especially important: Retrieval of information that is relevant to a current activity. • Manipulate information in working memory UW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Modal Model of Memory 8 The Modal Memory Model (Atkinson & Shiffrin, 1968) Control Processes, Goldstein Figure 5.2 e.g., rehearsal Sensory Memory Input Short-Term Memory Long-Term Memory Output: Speech & Actions The Modal Model of Memory (Atkinson & Shiffrin, 1968) • Sensory Memory – brief storage of current perceptual inputs. • STM – short-term storage of current mental activity ♦ STM or Working Memory (WM) has multiple components • LTM – long-term storage of experiences, thoughts, facts ♦ LTM also has multiple components Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Happens When Rachel Looks Up a Phone Number 9 What happens as Rachel looks up a phone number? (a) She looks at the page in the phone book. Perceptual information enters sensory memory. (b) She pays attention to the relevant phone number. The number is stored in short-term memory (STM). (c) She dials the phone number while maintaining the number in STM (rehearsal). UW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Example Continued 10 What happens as Rachel looks up a phone number? (d) She memorizes the phone number (stores the number in longterm memory or LTM). This process is called encoding. (e) Days later, she retrieves the number from LTM. UW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Return to the Modal Memory Model 11 The Modal Memory Model (Atkinson & Shiffrin, 1968) Control Processes, Goldstein Figure 5.2 e.g., rehearsal Sensory Memory Input Long-Term Memory Short-Term Memory Output: Speech & Actions The Modal Model of Memory (Atkinson & Shiffrin, 1968) • Sensory Memory – brief storage of current perceptual inputs. • STM – short-term storage of current mental activity ♦ STM or Working Memory (WM) has multiple components • LTM – long-term storage of experiences, thoughts, facts ♦ LTM also has multiple components Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Distinction Between STM and LTM 12 Distinction Between STM & LTM • Standard STM example: Remember the following words: hand, chair, reed, bottle • We will wait, perhaps, 15 seconds. Then I’ll ask you to tell me the words that you read in the order that they were written. • Another STM example: You know where you are right now and what you are doing there. You are actively processing this information (along with other thoughts). • LTM refers to a variety of memory processes that allow retrieval of memories that are not currently preserved in STM. UW: Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Illustration of LTM vs STM Distinction from Goldstein Textbook 13 Figure 6.1: Example of the STM/LTM Distinction LTM UW: Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 STM List of Functions That Are Included in LTM 14 LTM Includes ..... • Important information about the self and events in the world, but also, ... • Trivial information about what has happened in the recent past, ♦ e.g., what was the picture at the beginning of the lecture), and also, .... • “Semantic” knowledge, e.g., what is an apple, a pencil; which is bigger, a mouse or a moose; etc. • How to do things: Tie your shoes, drive a car, dial a phone number, cook a meal, .... • Learned associations that are not explicit, e.g., the atmosphere of a dentist’s office makes you feel apprehensive. UW: Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Diagram of Modal Memory Model – Next Topic = Sensory Memory 15 The Modal Memory Model (Atkinson & Shiffrin, 1968) Control Processes, e.g., rehearsal Sensory Memory Input Next Long-Term Memory Short-Term Memory Output: Speech & Actions SUMMARY OF MAJOR MEMORY SYSTEMS • Sensory Memory – brief storage of current perceptual inputs. • STM – short-term storage of current mental activity ♦ STM or Working Memory (WM) has multiple components • LTM – long-term storage of experiences, thoughts, facts ♦ LTM also has multiple components UW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Definition of Sensory Memory 16 Sensory Memory • Example: Sparkler trail or flash image in a dark room. • Sensory memory is the retention of the effects of sensory stimulation. Very brief – less then 1 second. • Sensory memory is partly due to processes that are close to level of the receptors, but it has a major component that is central. ♦ "Central" means at the level of the cortex, i.e., at the level of the visual cortex for visual stimuli; at the level of the auditory cortex for auditory stimuli, etc. • What are the capacity limits for visual sensory memory? How much information is stored? How long can it be stored? UW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Diagram: Where Is the Capacity Limit in the Memory System? 17 Evidence for a Capacity Limit on Sensory or Short-Term Memory • Suppose a letter array is flashed on the screen to the right. • Can you name all of the letters in a specific row, e.g., in Row 3? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 E W M Y R I X S U N T O P Q V K Continue with Slide with Example of Pre-Cueing 18 Evidence for a Capacity Limit on Sensory or Short-Term Memory • Suppose a letter array is flashed on the screen to the right. • Can you name all of the letters in a specific row, e.g., in Row 3? • The task is easy if I tell you the row to remember before I flash the letter array. (See letter array to the right.) Pay attention to Row 2. Answer: P E C Z Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 E W M Y R I X S U N T O P Q V K O P H V A E X F W C M B N Z U I Same Problem is Hard If You Must Remember All 16 Letters 19 Evidence for a Capacity Limit on Sensory or Short-Term Memory • Suppose a letter array is flashed on the screen to the right. • Can you name all 16 letters in the array? • The task is hard if I ask you to remember all 16 letters in the letter array. (See letter array to the right.) What were the 16 letters in the array? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 E W M Y R I X S U N T O P Q V K U Y I L R Z C T V Q D J X M W N Is the Capacity Limit on Sensory Memory or STM? 20 Controversy: Is the capacity limit a limit on sensory memory, or short-term memory? Transfer too slow? Limit here? Limit here? Input Sensory Memory Long-Term Memory Short-Term Memory • We have evidence that a capacity limit exists: You can accurately report a pre-selected 4 letters from a 12 letter array, but you can't accurately report all 12 letters. • Is there a limit on the capacity of sensory memory? UW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Sperling's Partial Report Paradigm 21 Sperling’s Partial Report Procedure (Paradigm) • Digression on Terminology: An "experimental paradigm" is a type of experiment. Often there will be many experiments that all use the same paradigm. • Purpose of Sperling's partial report paradigm: To determine what are the limits on the capacity of sensory memory. • To save lecture time, I will not explain the partial report paradigm in lecture. ♦ Students will be responsible for knowing its purpose and its conclusions, but not how it works. ♦ Sperling’s partial report paradigm is important for perceptual psychology. Not so important for higher cognitive processes. UW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Diagram: Conclusion re Capacity of Sensory Memory 22 Conclusion of Partial Report Experiment • Very large, possibly unlimited capacity. • Information decays to 0 within 1 second. Control Processes Input Sensory Memory Short-Term Memory Long-Term Memory Output: Speech/Actions UW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Is Meant By Capacity Limits on Memory? 23 What Is Meant by Limits on Memory Capacity? • Limit on memory capacity refers to a limit on the amount of information that can be held in memory. ♦ Not the amount of information that can be input to memory (encoding), and not the amount of information that can be retrieved from memory (retrieval). Sensory memory – very large, approximately unlimited Short-Term memory – ? Long-Term memory – very large, approximately unlimited • Next: Introduction to Short-Term Memory & Working Memory UW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Overview of Short-Term Memory & Working Memory 24 Overview of Short-Term Memory (STM) & Working Memory (WM) Short-Term Memory (STM) • Intermediate processing stage between sensory memory & long-term memory • Emphasis on quantitative aspects: ♦ ♦ Limited in amount of information storage. Limited duration of storage. Working Memory (WM) – evolved out of the concept of STM • Same as above plus some additional ideas • Multicomponent system – verbal, visual-spatial, episodic components • Emphasis on manipulation of information & control of information flow. UW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Three Important Aspects of STM 25 Three Important Characteristics of STM Short-Term Memory = STM 1. STM has limited capacity 2. Active maintenance is needed to retain information in STM. ♦ Without active maintenance information is quickly lost from STM. 3. Information in STM is high accessible. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Capacity Limits on STM - Magical Number Seven Plus or Minus Two 26 What Are the Limits on STM Capacity? • George Miller, "The Magic Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two." What is this about? Two Aspects of STM Capacity: Quantity & Duration • Quantity: How many separate pieces of information can be held in STM? • Duration: How long does information last in STM if we don't actively process it? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Demo re Measurement of Memory Span 27 Demo: Memory Span for Digits • On each trial, you will see a sequence of numbers (digits) presented one after the other. • Your Task: Write down all of the digits in the order in which they were presented. • For example, if you see 4 8 7 8 Write down: 4 8 7 8 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Demo with 4 Digits – Fixation Point 28 Digit Span Trial with 4 Digits * Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Display Digits – Automatic Timer, 1 Sec. per Slide 29 Digit 7 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 30 Digit 3 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 31 Digit 2 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 32 Digit 5 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 33 What Were the Digits? • Correct Answer 7325 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Demo with 10 Digits – Fixation Point 34 Digit Span Trial with 10 Digits * Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Display Digits – Automatic Timer, 1 Second per Slide 35 Digit 9 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 36 Digit 6 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 37 Digit 2 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 38 Digit 1 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 39 Digit 6 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 40 Digit 8 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 41 Digit 1 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 42 Digit 2 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 43 Digit 5 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 44 Digit 7 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 45 Memory Span for Digits: About 7 2 • Clearly retaining 3 or 4 digits is easy. Retaining 15 or more digits is impossible. • Typical limit is around 7 2 is the memory span for digits Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Luck & Vogel (1997): Memory Span for Colors & Positions 46 What Were the Digits? • Correct Answer 9621681257 • Obviously, 10 digits are much harder to retain than 4 digits. 20 digits would be impossible to retain ♦ Except possibly if you had special training to do this task. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Memory Span for Digits: About 7 2 47 Tuesday, April 19, 2016: The Lecture Ended Here Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 48 Next: Lecture 04-3 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 49 Limits on the Quantity & Duration of Information Held in Short-Term Memory Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 04/20/2016: Lecture 04-3 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • Mention Friday section & essay quiz • How much information can be retained in STM? • How long does information last in STM? Lecture probably ends here ♦ Brown-Peterson task ♦ Retroactive and proactive interference ♦ Proactive interference and the Brown-Peterson paradigm Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results for Memory Span for Digits 51 Memory Span for Digits: About 7 2 • Digit Span Memory Task: ♦ Digits are presented one at a time. (Experimenter controls how many digits will be presented.) ♦ After subject sees the digits, subject must respond with the exact sequence of digits that were presented. ♦ Dependent variable: Percentage of trials with perfect performance when the number of digits equals 2 or 3 or ... or 10 or 11 or ..... • Result: Retaining 3 or 4 digits is easy. Retaining 15 or more digits is impossible. • Typical limit is around 7 2 digits is the memory span for digits Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Luck & Vogel (1997): Memory Span for Colors & Positions 52 Memory Span for Color & Location • Luck & Vogel (1997) is described in Goldstein's Figure 5.8 and Figure 5.9. • Subject sees some colored squares on one slide followed by another slide with colored squares. • Subject’s task is to say whether the two slides are identical or different. • Result: Performance drops off radically after presentation contains more than 3 squares. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Typical Results for Memory Span with Different Contents 53 Typical Results for Memory Span with Different Contents • We can repeat this experiment with different types of items. ♦ Auditory (spoken) digits ♦ Nonsense syllables – CVC form like "KOR" ♦ Short words chosen at random ♦ Long words chosen at random • George Miller's "Magic Number Seven Plus or Minus Two". • Conclusion: There is a strong capacity limit on STM, i.e., there is a limit on the total number of items that can be retained in STM. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Return to "Magical Number 7 +/- 2: Raise Issue of Chunking 54 Magical Number Seven Plus or Minus Two Miller, G. A. (1956) The magical number seven, plus or minus two: Some limits on our capacity for processing information. Psychological Review, 63, 81–97. • There is a strong limit on the quantity of information stored in STM. ♦ Roughly the same limit applies to many different contents, e.g., digits, nonsense syllables, short words, long words, colors in different positions on a screen, tones of different pitch, etc. • Limitation on STM capacity only applies if there are no meaningful relationships between separate items. • When meaningful relationships exist among the items, many more items can be held in STM. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Some Issues re Measures of Memory Span 55 Some Issues Regarding Measures of STM Capacity Limits • The preceding examples use low-meaning stimuli. Would the results differ if we used stimuli with more meaning? • Example: Waiter or waitress taking a dinner order: ♦ I'll have the mushroom soup, the filet of sole with green beans, and rice. (14 words) ♦ I'll have a ceasar salad, the flank steak medium rare, carrots and peas, and mashed potatoes. (16 words) ♦ I'll have ..... • Answer: Yes, the results are different when the stimuli are meaningful. How should we interpret this? (See next slide). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Chunking & Recoding 56 STM Capacity Limits Apply When Stimuli Are Unrelated • The capacity limit, 7 ± 2, applies to sequences of stimuli .... that do not have an internal organization. ♦ Example (no internal organization): EGG, PEN, FOG, CAR, BELT, FLY, .... ♦ Example (has internal organization): YESTERDAY I WENT SHOPPING FOR A NEW COAT. I WANTED A WARM COAT THAT HAS A HOOD, .... • "Chunk" – a larger unit of information built out of related smaller units. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Example of Chunking – Animals List 57 Example of Chunking • Your Task: Remember the following 12 words: husky cougar bruins duck Utes trojans golden bears buffalo beaver sun devils wildcats cardinal • Can you remember the words in the list? • ANSWER = mascots of Pac-12 schools: husky, cougar, duck, beaver, cardinal, golden bear, bruin, trojans, wildcats, sun devils, buffalo, Utes • We "chunk" the individual items under the concept “mascots of Pac-12 schools.” Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Chunking in Everyday Experience 58 Chunking in Everyday Experience • Typically everyday experience is meaningful. Not like trying to remember a series of unrelated digits in the lab! • In everyday experience, people constantly reorganize the current information in terms of related general knowledge. • In a very unfamiliar situation, you may feel overwhelmed with information overload – you aren’t able to chunk effectively in the unfamiliar situation. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Recoding - Definition 59 Recoding • "Recoding" – Changing the representational format (change in code) • Recoding of information in STM can affect ability to retain information in STM. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Codes in STM & LTM 60 Codes in Short-Term & Long-Term Memory A "code" is a format in which information is represented in the cognitive system. (Not the same as the "neural code") • Phonological codes – words represented as sequences of sounds. • Visual codes – mental imagery, diagrams, perceptual memories • Semantic codes – meanings. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------• Short-term memory (STM) and long-term memory (LTM) use all of these codes plus possibly others that are not listed here. ♦ Particular tasks may be biased towards one kind of coding. • Next: Evidence for different types of mental codes. This evidence is just a taste – later lectures will present much more evidence. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Evidence for Phonological Codes 61 Evidence for Phonological Codes • Phonological codes (representing words in terms of the sound of the words) ♦ Conrad (1964): People who are asked to remember visually presented letters, make mistakes that confuse a correct letter with similar sounding letters. Example: Suppose you are asked to remember AFTR. (The letters are presented visually one after the another a screen.) Common mistake: ASTR or AFPR • Notice "S" sounds like "F" and "P" sounds like "T". • The letters were presented visually, so the effect of sound similarity is due to the way the subject represents the stimulus, and not the stimulus alone. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Evidence for Visual Codes – Mental Rotation Studies 62 Evidence for Visual Codes: Shepard's Mental Rotation Experiments • Response time for "identical" figures is a linear (straight-line) function of the angle of rotation between the figures. Response Time • TASK: As quickly as possible, decide whether the two figures shown to the right have the same or different shapes. Angle of Rotation Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Mental Rotation Experiment - Interpretation 63 Evidence for Visual Codes: Shepard's Mental Rotation Experiments • Result is easy to explain if we assume that subjects are rotating a mental image. ♦ “Propositional representation” = Symbolic code like human language or a computer language. Response Time • Results are hard to explain if mental representation is exclusively propositional. Angle of Rotation Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Semantic Codes 64 Semantic Codes • Confusions between long-term memories are usually based on similarity of meaning rather than on similarity of sound or appearance. Example: Suppose you must remember the following words. DOG, PONY, WOLF, ELEPHANT, PENCIL, WHALE ♦ Recognition memory test: Did the list contain "PONY"? Did the list contain "EAGLE"? ♦ Later you are more likely to say "Yes" to "HORSE" than to "LOG." (Intrusion Error: False recognition due to similarity of meaning) ♦ Later you are more likely to say "No" to "PENCIL" than to "WOLF." (Omission Error: False rejection due to dissimilarity of meaning) • Semantic codes also play a role in STM but these examples are more complicated. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Summary re Codes 65 Summary re Memory Codes • Recoding: Changing the code in which information is represented, e.g., changing from a phonological code to a visual code. • The phonological code is the primary code for STM. • The semantic code is the primary code for LTM. ♦ Other codes are also used in STM and LTM, e.g., visual code. • Some tasks are easier to perform by using one type of code or another. • Recoding can sometimes help to overcome capacity limits of STM. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Overview of STM & WM Models 66 Example of Recoding • "It is a cold but sunny winter day. You are looking across Drumheller Fountain. Mt. Rainier is visible in the distance. Two children are playing with a ball next to the fountain. They accidentally throw the ball into the water." • If you formed a mental image of the situation, then this is an example of recoding (changing from the verbal format to an image format). • Recoding involves changing the cognitive “code." • Recoding can increase the amount of information that one can retain in STM by putting it into a form that is more easily retained, e.g., changing verbal information into a mental image. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Example of Chunking and/or Recoding – Chess Master Example 67 Famous Example of Chunking and/or Recoding Chess Masters versus Chess Novices (Beginners) • Chase and Simon (1973a, 1973b): Chess masters can remember the locations of a large number of pieces on a chess board if it is flashed in front of them. Chase and Simon's studies are discussed in Chapter 12 of Goldstein (2014, 4th edition). They also illustrate differences in how chess experts and chess novices use their memory resources. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results for Realistic Boards 68 Chess Masters versus Chess Beginners (Novices) Master does better because he can chunk based on strategic relationships. Master Novice (a) Actual game positions Master does no better than novice because he can’t chunk. Master Novice (b) Random placement • Chess masters are much better than chess novices at remembering chess positions. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results for Random Boards 69 Chess Masters versus Chess Beginners (Novices) Master does better because he can chunk based on strategic relationships Master Novice (a) Actual game positions Master does no better than novice because he can’t chunk. Master Novice (b) Random placement • Masters and novices are equally bad at remembering a random chess position (impossible position) on a chess board. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Chunking Summary 70 Summary: Chunking, Recoding, STM Capacity Limits • As we take in information, ..... we reorganize it into larger chunks, and ..... we recode the information into other mental formats. ♦ Knowledge, learning, and past experience help us use our limited-capacity short-term memory more effectively. • Are experiments that study STM capacity limits relevant to everyday life? ♦ In everyday life, we almost never try to remember sequences of unrelated information. ♦ Yes – the capacity limits are always present, even if they are hidden by our chunking and recoding strategies in everyday life. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Causes Forgetting in WM/STM? 71 Are Experiments that Study STM Capacity Limits Relevant to Everyday Life? • In everyday life, we almost never try to remember sequences of unrelated information. • Yes – the capacity limits are always present, even if they are hidden by our chunking and recoding strategies in everyday life. • STM capacity limits strongly influence reasoning strategies even if they don't directly quantify the amount of semanticallyrelated information that can be held in STM. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Causes Forgetting from WM/STM? 72 What Causes Forgetting from WM/STM? • Why is information lost from STM? How long does information last in STM without active processing? • Two hypotheses ♦ Decay – representations of information simply "fall apart." ♦ Interference – other information "bumps" information out of STM. • Brown-Peterson paradigm – an attempt to measure how long information is retained in STM without active processing. • General Conclusion: Without active processing, all information is lost after 15 – 20 seconds. • What causes the loss of information? ♦ Interference - one very likely cause. ♦ Decay - hard to prove convincingly that decay occurs; maybe it does. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 The Brown-Peterson Paradigm - Example 73 Next: Lecture 04-4 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 74 Decay in Short-Term Memory (STM) then: The Working Memory (WM) Model Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 04/21/2016: Lecture 04-4 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • What causes forgetting in STM? ♦ Decay ♦ Interference (proactive interference and retroactive interference) • Measurement of decay in STM: The Brown/Peterson paradigm • Working memory (WM) model of Baddeley & Hitch ♦ Phonological loop ♦ Visuospatial sketch pad ♦ Episodic working memory Lecture probably ends here • Evidence for the phonological loop Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 76 What Causes Forgetting from WM/STM? • Why is information lost from STM? How long does information last in STM without active processing? • Two hypotheses ♦ Decay – representations of information simply "fall apart." ♦ Interference – other information "bumps" information out of STM. • Brown-Peterson paradigm – an attempt to measure how long information is retained in STM without active processing. • General Conclusion: Without active processing, all information is lost after 15 – 20 seconds. • What causes the loss of information? ♦ Interference - It is certain that this is one cause. ♦ Decay - hard to prove convincingly that decay occurs; maybe it does. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 The Brown-Peterson Paradigm - Example 77 Brown-Peterson Paradigm • Brown-Peterson paradigm – an attempt to measure how long information is retained in STM without active processing. ♦ The Brown-Peterson task is this past week’s Coglab. • Example of the Task: Remember three letters: P N R Count backwards by 3’s from the given number: 108 Stop counting and report the letters when the experimenter tells you to do so. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Duration of delay is different on different trials, e.g., 5 second, 10 second, 15 seconds, ..... Brown-Peterson Paradigm – Summary of the Task 78 What is the Purpose of the Brown-Peterson Paradigm? • Brown-Peterson paradigm – an attempt to measure how long information is retained in STM without active processing. ♦ Remember three letters, e.g., “P N R" ♦ Count backwards by 3's from a given number ♦ Report the letters after a delay Assumption 1: While you are counting backwards, you cannot rehearse “P N R”. Assumption 2: Counting backwards by 3's does not interfere with retention of "P N R". • Goal: Measure decay characteristics of STM. • Counting backwards by 3’s is an example of articulatory suppression. ♦ Later when we discuss working memory, we will say that counting backwards by 3’s suppresses rehearsal in the phonological loop (PL). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results for Brown-Peterson Task – Averaged Results 79 Results for the Brown-Peterson Paradigm Delay in Seconds • IMPORTANT FACT: These results are averaged over many trials. • Superficially, the results support the hypothesis that without active processing, almost all information is lost after about 15 – 20 seconds. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Keppel & Underwood: Reanalysis for 3rd & 18th Trial 80 Keppel & Underwood’s Reanalysis of Brown-Peterson Results Delay in Seconds Delay in Seconds Delay in Seconds • Panel (b): Performance on the 1st trial of Brown-Peterson task. • Panel (c): Performance on the 3rd trial of Brown-Peterson task. • Performance at 18 second delay gets worse as subject performs more memory trials! Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Graph – Hypothesis That Proactive Interference Causes Forgetting 81 Keppel & Underwood’s Reanalysis of Brown-Peterson Results Delay in Seconds Delay in Seconds Delay in Seconds • Why does performance at 18 second delay get worse as subject performs more memory trials? • Proactive interference – explained on next slide Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Interference – Definition; Proactive & Retroactive Interference 82 Interference – a Cause of Forgetting • Interference as a cause of forgetting – something you learn or already know makes it difficult to remember something else. • Retroactive Interference (RI): New learning interferes with recall of previous learning. ♦ Example: What did you see when you walked to school 7 days ago? Everything you have seen since then interferes with access to that memory. ♦ Example: Julie used to go out with Tom and now she goes out with Ted. Memory of Julie/Ted interferes with memory of Julie/Tom. • Proactive Interference (PI): Old learning interferes with recall of new learning. ♦ Example: If you already play tennis, it is harder to learn to play badminton than if you already play basketball (not tennis). ♦ Example: It is hard to remember where I parked my car today because I have many memories of parking my car in various places. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Experimental Design for Wicken’s Exp Showing Release from PI 83 Forgetting in Brown-Peterson Paradigm Is Due in Part to PI Simplified Version of Figure 6.6 (p. 157): Wicken's Study of Influence of Proactive Interference on Brown-Peterson Task • Wicken’s experiment uses the Brown-Peterson paradigm. • Experiment has 3 groups, but only two are important. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Slide – Emphasis Rectangle on Fruit Group 84 Forgetting in Brown-Peterson Paradigm Is Due in Part to PI Simplified Version of Figure 6.6 (p. 157): Wicken's Study of Influence of Proactive Interference on Brown-Peterson Task • Fruit Group: Every trial requires subject to remember 3 fruit. • Meat Group: Trials 1 – 3 require remembering meat words. Trial 4 requires remembering fruit words. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results of Wicken’s Experiment 85 Forgetting in Brown-Peterson Paradigm Results in Part from PI Fruit Group Meat Group Trial 1: banana, peach, apple Trial 1: salami, pork, chicken Trial 2: plum, apricot, lime Trial 2: bacon, hot doc, beef Trial 3: melon, lemon, grape Trial 3: hamburger, turkey, veal Trial 4: orange, cherry, pineapple (same category) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Remember list of fruits after remembering other lists of fruits. Trial 4: orange, cherry, pineapple (switch category) Meat Group Remember list of fruits after remembering lists of meats. % Recalled After 20 s Delay % Recalled After 20 s Delay Fruit Group Same Same Graph Without the Colored Boxes 86 Forgetting in Brown-Peterson Paradigm Results in Part from PI Fruit Group Mean Group Trial 1: banana, peach, apple Trial 1: salami, pork, chicken Trial 2: plum, apricot, lime Trial 2: bacon, hot dog, beef Trial 3: melon, lemon, grape Trial 3: hamburger, turkey, veal Trial 4: orange, cherry, pineapple (same category) Trial 4: orange, cherry, pineapple (switch category) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Meat Group Remember list of fruits after remembering lists of meats. % Recalled After 20 s Delay % Recalled After 20 s Delay Fruit Group Remember list of fruits after remembering other lists of fruits. Same Graph: Define “Release from PI” 87 Forgetting in Brown-Peterson Paradigm Results in Part from PI • PI (Proactive Interference: Previous trials with same category (fruit or meat) interferes with STM retention on current trial. • Release from PI: Improved STM retention on trial where PI no longer influences performance. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Meat Group Remember list of fruits after remembering lists of meats. % Recalled After 20 s Delay % Recalled After 20 s Delay Fruit Group Remember list of fruits after remembering other lists of fruits. Summary: What Causes Forgetting from WM/STM? 88 Conclusion re Forgetting in the Brown-Peterson Paradigm Delay in Seconds Delay in Seconds Delay in Seconds • Proactive interference is a major cause of forgetting in the Brown-Peterson paradigm. • Brown-Peterson paradigm attempts to measure decay of memory in STM, but the measurement is confounded with PI (proactive interference). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Requirements for the "Perfect" Way to Measure Decay in STM 89 Requirements for the "Perfect" Way to Measure Decay in STM • Researcher must discover Task X such that: 1) Performing X does not interfere with retaining some information Z in STM, e.g., Z could be remembering the words "spoon hawk knot". 2) Past learning does not interfere with performance of Z, i.e., no proactive interference. 3) Performing X prevents rehearsal of the to-be-remembered item, e.g., prevents rehearsal of "spoon hawk knot." • In the Brown/Peterson task, X = counting backwards by 3's Z = remembering short lists, e.g., short lists of foods, or short lists of digits, or short lists of names, etc. • Very hard to discover a good Task X. Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Bottom-Line re Forgetting in STM 90 Bottom Line re Duration of Storage in WM/STM • To keep information in WM/STM, you need to actively process the information. ♦ Phonological rehearsal & forming mental images ♦ Associating contents of WM/STM with information in LTM (thinking) • Without active processing, information in WM/STM is lost after 15 – 20 seconds. ♦ In everyday life, information may be lost from WM/STM even more quickly, e.g., after a few seconds, if some new information interferes with the contents of WM/STM. • Why is information lost from WM/STM? ♦ Interference – well-established cause of forgetting from WM/STM. ♦ Decay – no one has yet proved definitively that decay does or does not occur. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Overview of WM versus STM - END 91 Overview of the STM and WM Models Short-Term Memory (STM) Working Memory (WM) • STM is a single component • WM has multiple components • Main theoretical issue: How much information can be stored in STM and how long does it last? • Main theoretical issues: How is information represented in WM? How is information manipulated in WM? o The issue of the duration and quantity of information storage is still important for WM, .... but question of how WM manipulates information is the central focus of research. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Diagram of the Atkinson/Shiffrin (Modal) Model of Memory 92 Modal Model of Memory (circa 1970) Control Processes Input Sensory Memory Short-Term Memory Long-Term Memory Output: Speech/Actions Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Diagram for the Baddeley-Hitch Working Memory Model 93 Baddeley-Hitch Working Memory (WM) Model Think of the diagram to the right as an expansion & revision of the standard STM model. 1. Phonological Loop (PL) ♦ ♦ ♦ Storage of sounds Rehearsal Manipulation of verbal information 2. Visuospatial Sketch Pad (VSP) ♦ Storage & manipulation of visual images and spatial information. 3. Central Executive (CE) ♦ ♦ Directs activity within the PL or VSP. Coordinates activity between PL, VSP, and LTM. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Slide Without the Emphasis Rectangles 94 Baddeley-Hitch Working Memory (WM) Model Think of the diagram to the right as an expansion & revision of the standard STM model. 1. Phonological Loop (PL) ♦ ♦ ♦ Storage of sounds Rehearsal Manipulation of verbal information 2. Visuospatial Sketch Pad (VSP) ♦ Storage & manipulation of visual images and spatial information. 3. Central Executive (CE) ♦ ♦ Directs activity within the PL or VSP. Coordinates activity between PL, VSP, and LTM. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Justifies the Hypothesis: PL is Part of WM? 95 What Justifies the Hypothesis: PL Is Part of WM? Summary of Evidence for PL (Phonological Loop) • Phonological similarity effect: Memory span is smaller for lists of similar-sounding words than for lists of dissimilar-sounding words. ♦ Example 1: Remember the list, D B C T P G (harder) ♦ Example 2: Remember the list, K F Y L R Q (easier) • Word length effect: Memory span is greater for lists of short words than for lists of long words. • Articulatory suppression experiments • Neuropsychological evidence (later - not in this lecture) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Demo of the Phonological Similarity Effect 96 Demo of Phonological Similarity Effect: Memory Span for Words • On each trial, you will see a sequence of words presented one after the other. • Your Task: Write down all of the words in the order in which they were presented. • For example, if you see ORANGE LOOSE GRIP TUESDAY Write down: ORANGE, LOOSE, GRIP, TUESDAY. Note that ORANGE, TUESDAY, GRIP, LOOSE is incorrect. • On each trial, make a mental note of how hard it was to do the task. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Fixation Point 97 Word Span Trial with 5 Words: How Hard Is This? * Note to Self: The following slides advance automatically on a timer, i.e., don't advance the slides manually. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Next: On Click – Display Stimulus Words on a Timer, 1 Slide per second 98 Digit EASE Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 99 Digit GONE Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 100 Digit SING Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 101 Digit TOP Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 102 Digit CRISP Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 103 What Were the Words? • Correct Answer: EASE, GONE, SING, TOP, CRISP • Remember how hard was that task. Next: Repeat task but with different stimulus words. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Fixation Point 104 Word Span with 5 Words: How Hard is This? * Note to Self: The following slides advance automatically on a timer, i.e., don't advance the slides manually. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 On Click, Display Stimulis on Timer, 1 Slide per Second 105 Digit RAKE Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 106 Digit FATE Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 107 Digit TASTE Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 108 Digit BREAK Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 109 Digit BAIT Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 110 What Were the Words? • Correct Answer: RAKE, FATE, TASTE, BREAK, BAIT • Which word list was harder to remember? List 1: The words are not similar in sound. List 2: The words are similar in sound. List 2 is harder to remember. This is the phonological similarity effect. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Theoretical Analysis of the Phonological Similarity Effect 111 Interpretation of Phonological Similarity Effect Compare: • Phonological similarity effect: Memory span is smaller for1: similar-sounding words TOP than forCRISP dissimilar List EASE GONE SING MINTsounding DOOR words. List 2:does RAKE BREAK memory? BAIT RATE FADE What thisFATE show TASTE about working • Basic Assumption of PL: One way people maintain information in STM is by rehearsing the sound of words. • Similar-sounding words are more confusable in a sound-based rehearsal. Memory span for similar-sounding words should be smaller if retention is based on rehearsal in the PL. • The predicted smaller memory span for lists of similar-sounding words is confirmed (even if the stimuli are presented visually!). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 Repeat this Slide without Yellow TextBox 112 Interpretation of Phonological Similarity Effect • Phonological similarity effect: Memory span is smaller for similar-sounding words than for dissimilar sounding words. What does this show about working memory? • Basic Assumption of PL: One way that people maintain information in STM is by rehearsing the sound of words. • Similar-sounding words are more confusable in a sound-based rehearsal. Memory span for similar-sounding words should be smaller if retention is based on rehearsal in the PL. • The predicted smaller memory span for lists of similar-sounding words is confirmed (even if the stimuli are presented visually!). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 Repeat: Evidence for the Existence of a Phonological Loop 113 Evidence for the Hypothesis: PL Is Part of WM • Phonological similarity effect: Memory span is smaller for lists of similar-sounding words than for lists of dissimilar-sounding words. ♦ Example 1: Remember the list, D B C T P G (harder) ♦ Example 2: Remember the list, K F Y L R Q (easier) • Word length effect: Memory span is greater for lists of short words than for lists of long words. • Articulatory suppression experiments • Neuropsychological evidence (later - not in this lecture) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 Demo of the Word Length Effect 114 Thursday, April 21, 2016: The Lecture Ended Here Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 115 Next: Lecture 05-1 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 116 Phonological Loop, Visuospatial Sketchpad & Articulatory Suppression Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 04/25/2016: Lecture 05-1 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • Working Memory (WM) Model is a multi-component model of STM. • Phonological Loop (PL): ♦ Phonological similarity effect ♦ Word length effect ♦ Articulatory suppression reduces phonological similarity effect and word length effect. • Visuospatial Sketchpad (VSP) ♦ Mental subtraction of images ♦ Brooks’ experiment with pointing and verbal responses Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 Lecture ends here Diagram of Working Memory Model 118 Baddeley-Hitch Working Memory (WM) Model Think of the diagram to the right as an expansion & revision of the standard STM model. 1. Phonological Loop (PL) ♦ ♦ ♦ Storage of sounds Rehearsal Manipulation of verbal information 2. Visuospatial Sketch Pad (VSP) ♦ Storage & manipulation of visual images and spatial information. 3. Central Executive (CE) ♦ ♦ Directs activity within the PL or VSP. Coordinates activity between PL, VSP, and LTM. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Slide Without the Emphasis Rectangles 119 Baddeley-Hitch Working Memory (WM) Model Think of the diagram to the right as an expansion & revision of the standard STM model. 1. Phonological Loop (PL) ♦ ♦ ♦ Storage of sounds Rehearsal Manipulation of verbal information 2. Visuospatial Sketch Pad (VSP) ♦ Storage & manipulation of visual images and spatial information. 3. Central Executive (CE) ♦ ♦ Directs activity within the PL or VSP. Coordinates activity between PL, VSP, and LTM. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Justifies the Hypothesis: PL is Part of WM? 120 Evidence for the Hypothesis: PL Is Part of WM • Phonological similarity effect: Memory span is smaller for lists of similar-sounding words than for lists of dissimilar-sounding words. ♦ Example 1: Remember the list, D B C T P G (harder) ♦ Example 2: Remember the list, K F Y L R Q (easier) • Word length effect: Memory span is greater for lists of short words than for lists of long words. • Articulatory suppression experiments • Neuropsychological evidence (later - not in this lecture) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 Demo of the Word Length Effect 121 Next: Demo of Word Length Effect • Word length effect: Memory span is smaller for list of long words than for lists of short words. ♦ "Long" means multisyllabic. • We already did some trials with short words. • Next: Memory span trial with long words. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Fixation Point 122 Word Span with 5 Words: How Hard is This? * Note to Self: The following slides advance automatically on a timer, i.e., don't advance the slides manually. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 On Click, Display Stimulus on a Timer, 1 Slide per Second 123 Digit HABITUALLY Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 124 Digit NEUROTOXIN Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 125 Digit ANTICIPATION Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 126 Digit DECIDUOUS Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 127 Digit SAXOPHONE Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 128 What Were the Words? • Correct Answer: HABITUALLY, NEUROTOXIN, ANTICIPATION, DECIDUOUS, SAXOPHONE • Which word list was harder to remember? ♦ ♦ First list: Short dissimilar sounding words Third list: Long dissimilar sounding words Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 . Theoretical Analysis of the Word Length Effect 129 Interpretation of Word Length Effect • Word length effect: Memory span is smaller for lists of long words than for lists of short words. What does this show about working memory? • Basic assumption of PL: One way that people maintain information in STM is by rehearsing the sound of words. • Prediction: Since longer words take longer to rehearse, it takes longer to complete the list and return to each word in the list. Therefore we are more likely to forget longer words from a list of length N than to forget shorter words from a list of length N. Thus, memory span should be smaller for longer words. ♦ Prediction is confirmed. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Word Length Effect & Digit Span: Chinese, Welsh, & English 130 Word Length Effect & Digit Span • Digits take longer to pronounce in English than in Chinese. Digits take longer to pronounce in Welsh than in English; England Wales • Digit span is greater for Chinese speakers than for English speakers. Digit span is greater for English speakers than for Welsh speakers. • Interpretation: ♦ Everybody has the same basic STM capacity. ♦ Chinese speakers can rehearse digits faster than English speakers. Therefore they can retain more digits on the average in a Digit Span task. ♦ English speakers can rehearse digits faster than Welsh speakers. Therefore they can retain more digits on the average in a Digit Span task. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Define Articulatory Suppression – Then Use Articulatory Suppression in Exp 131 Evidence for the Hypothesis: PL Is Part of WM • Phonological similarity effect: Memory span is smaller for lists of similar-sounding words than for lists of dissimilar-sounding words. ♦ Example 1: Remember the list, D B C T P G (harder) ♦ Example 2: Remember the list, K F Y L R Q (easier) • Word length effect: Memory span is greater for lists of short words than for lists of long words. • Articulatory suppression experiments • Neuropsychological evidence (later - not in this lecture) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 Demo of the Word Length Effect 132 What Is Articulatory Suppression? • Articulatory Suppression: Have subject speak an irrelevant sound, e.g., "the, the, the, the, ....", while performing a memory task. • Purpose of articulatory suppression: Prevent use of PL while performing the memory task. The conflicting task ("the, the, the, ...") prevents use of PL. • Prediction: Articulatory suppression should reduce or eliminate the phonological similarity effect and the word length effect because .... a) articulatory suppression prevents use of PL while performing the memory task, and ... b) these effects result from phonological representations whose use is blocked by articulatory suppression. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Impact of Articulatory Suppression on Word Length Effect 133 Word Length Effect & Articulatory Suppression List 1: (long words) helicopter, transformation, synergy, counterpoint, .... List 2: (short words) ant, top, ear, dog, red, ..... • Condition 1A: Subjects read List 1, then try to remember it. • Condition 2A: Subjects read List 2, then try to remember it. • Condition 1B: Subjects read List 1 while saying "the, the, the, the, ...." Then they try to remember it. • Condition 2B: Subjects read List 2 while saying "the, the, the, the, ...." Then they try to remember it. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results of Experiment 134 Articulatory Suppression Reduces the Word Length Effect Cond 1A vs 2A Cond 1B vs 2B book dog ........ neurotoxin mendacious ...... Normal Word Length Effect Articulatory Suppression Results for Conditions 1A and 2A were not shown graphically in the Goldstein textbook. Results for Conditions 1B and 2B are shown in Figure 5.13. • Conditions 1A and 2A: Normal word length effect was found. • Conditions 2A and 2B (with articulatory suppression): Lists of short or long words remember about equally. Difference was not significant. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Interpretation of This Result 135 Interpretation of Effect of Articulatory Suppression Cond 1A vs 2A Cond 1B vs 2B book dog ........ neurotoxin mendacious ...... Normal Word Length Effect Articulatory Suppression • Articulatory suppression prevents rehearsal of word sounds (probably the subject rehearses the word images). So word length no longer has as much effect. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Comment re Articulatory Suppression & Phonological Similarity Effect 136 Articulatory Suppression & the Phonological Similarity Effect • Articulatory suppression also reduces the phonological similarity effect. (Results shown in a later lecture and in the textbook.) • These results support the existence of PL and the importance of verbal rehearsal in PL. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Summary re PL 137 Summary re Phonological Loop (PL) • Basic assumption of PL: One way that people maintain information in a short-term memory store by rehearsing the sound of words. This assumption predicts that ... • ... similar sounding words should be more easily confused in PL (phonological similarity effect) • ... longer words should be harder to maintain in PL (word length effect). • ... preventing people from verbal rehearsal should eliminate these effects (articulatory suppression). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Return to Diagram of Baddeley-Hitch WM Model - END 138 Baddeley-Hitch Working Memory (WM) Model Next 1. Phonological Loop (PL) ♦ Short-term storage ♦ Rehearsal ♦ Manipulation of verbal information Next 2. Visuospatial Sketch Pad (VSP) ♦ ♦ Short-term storage of visual & spatial information Manipulation of visual images and spatial information. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 3. Central Executive o o Directs activity within the PL or VSP. Coordinates activity between PL or VSP, and between these components and long-term memory (LTM). Brandimonte’s Mental Subtraction Task 139 Brandimonte: Mental Subtraction Task A' A Brandimonte, M. A., Hitch, G. J., & Bishop, D. V. M. (1992). Influence of short-term memory codes on visual image processing: Evidence from image transformation tasks. Journal of Experimental Psychology: Learning, Memory, and Cognition, 18, 157-165. The mental subtraction task is not discussed in the Goldstein textbook. Sample stimuli, A and A' ♦ First, the subject sees A. ♦ Next A disappears and the subject sees A'. Mental Subtraction Task: “Mentally subtract" the second stimulus from the first; then name the object that remains. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Slide with “Remainder” Image After Subtraction 140 Brandimonte: Mental Subtraction Task A' A X Remainder after mental subtraction Sample stimuli, A and A' Subject is not shown this image. ♦ First, the subject sees A. ♦ Next A disappears and the subject sees A'. ♦ Next A’ disappears and the subject must do the mental subtraction. Mental Subtraction Task: The subject must mentally "subtract" the second stimulus A’ from the first stimulus A, and name the object that remains: e.g., Remainder = Ice Cream Cones. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Instructions for a Sample Trial in the Mental Subtraction Experiment 141 Sample Experiment: Mental Subtraction • Next you will see an image. • After this image is removed, you will see a second image. • Mentally subtract the second image from the first image, and name the image that remains after the subtraction. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Image 1 of the Mental Subtraction Example 142 Example: Memorize This Image Image B Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Image to be Subtracted from this Image 143 Subtract This Image from the Preceding Image Image B' Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Name the Image that Results from Subtraction 144 Subtract This Image from the Preceding Image • Name the image that results from mentally subtracting Image B’ from Image B. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Name the Image that Results from Subtraction 145 Name the Image that Results From Subtracting Image B' from Image B? Result of Subtracting Image B' from Image B (This image would not be shown to a subject) • Possible answer: A fish Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Summary: Mental Subtraction Experiment 146 Summary: Mental "Subtraction" Task A A' X B B' Y Subtraction Task: The subject must mentally "subtract" the second stimulus from the first, and name the object that remains. ♦ ♦ Possible answer for A and A' on Left: Ice cream cones. Possible answer for B and B' on Right: Fish • Important to note that if the subject names the first image, then it is harder to access a name for the image that remains after subtracting the second image. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Combined with Mental Subtraction with Articulatory Suppression 147 Combine Mental Subtraction with Articulatory Suppression 2 1 Condition 1: Subject does the mental subtraction task. Condition 2: Subject says "la, la, la, la, ...." while doing the mental subtraction task. Finding: Subjects perform BETTER in Condition 2 than in Condition 1. Why? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Interpretation of Mental Subtraction Experiment 148 Interpretation of Mental Subtraction Experiment • The stimuli were designed so that subjects could name the object before "subtracting" the second image. ♦ E.g., with stimulus 1, a subject might think "headphones". • If a subject silently says "headphones" while looking at the left part of stimulus 1, it is harder to see ice cream cones in the image that results from mental subtraction. • Saying "la, la, la, la, ...." suppressed the tendency to name the initial stimulus, so the subject relies only on the visual image in VSP. This makes the subtraction task easier. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Summary re Mental Subtraction - END 149 Summary re Mental Subtraction Assumption: People can maintain a visual/spatial representation of information by actively processing it in VSP. Hypothesis: Suppression of PL can improve processing on tasks if ... 1) ... people are in the habit of naming the image (recoding initial image into the PL), but ..... 2) .... the task is actually performed more easily in VSP. Result: Articulatory suppression does improve performance on the mental subtraction task. ♦ This result is hard to explain if STM is a single storage area without separate PL & VSP. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 END 150 Next: Lecture 05-2 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 151 Brook's Image Scanning Experiment & Neuropsychological Evidence for Spatial Rehearsal Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 04/26/2016: Lecture 05-2 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • Brandimonte's Mental Subtraction Experiment Mental Subtraction + Articulatory Suppression Done! • Brook's Image Scanning Experiment: Interference between VSP & PL • Neuropsychological evidence for spatial rehearsal in the VSP • Similarities and differences between PL and VSP Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 Purpose of Brook's Image Scanning Experiment 153 Next: Brook’s Image Scanning Experiment Brooks, L. R. (1968). Spatial and verbal components of the act of recall. Canadian Journal of Psychology, 22, 349-368. • Purpose #1: To show that there are 2 different short-term stores: VSP and PL • Purpose #2: To show that ... ♦ Performing two different tasks in VSP interfere with each other. ♦ Performing two different tasks in PL interfere with each other. ♦ Performing one task in VSP and a different task in PL does not cause as much interference Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Image Scanning Experiment 154 Image Scanning (Brooks) • Experiment has 4 conditions. ♦ 2 types of stimulus: Diagrams or Sentences ♦ 2 types of responses: Pointing or Vocal Response* • Dependent variable = time to perform a task • Next: Explain the different stimulus types and response modes Response Mode Stimulus Types Diagrams Sentences Pointing 28.2 9.8 Vocal 11.3 13.8 * There was actually a third response type, “tapping”, but it will not be discussed here – it turned out not to be very informative. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Point Out that Goldstein Textbook Omits the Sentence Stimuli 155 Image Scanning (Brooks) • Experiment has 4 conditions. ♦ 2 types of stimulus: Diagrams or Sentences ♦ 2 types of responses: Pointing or Vocal Response* • Dependent variable = time to perform a task • Next: Explain the different stimulus types and response modes Response Mode Stimulus Types Diagrams Sentences Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Pointing 28.2 9.8 Vocal 11.3 13.8 Same Slide with Remark that Goldstein Omits Sentence Stimuli 156 Image Scanning (Brooks) • Experiment has 4 conditions. ♦ 2 types of stimulus: Diagrams or Sentences ♦ 2 types of responses: Pointing or Vocal Response* • Dependent variable = time to perform a task • Next: Explain the different stimulus types and response modes Response Mode Stimulus Types Diagrams Sentences Pointing 28.2 9.8 Vocal 11.3 13.8 Goldstein's discussion of this study omits the Sentence stimuli. Only the diagram stimuli are discussed in the textbook. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Explain Diagram Stimulus x Vocal Response 157 Image Scanning (Brooks) • Experiment has 4 conditions. ♦ 2 types of stimulus: Diagrams or Sentences ♦ 2 types of responses: Pointing or Vocal Response* • Dependent variable = time to perform a task • Next: Explain the different stimulus types and response modes Response Mode Stimulus Types Diagrams Sentences Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Pointing 28.2 9.8 Vocal 11.3 13.8 Next Slide Explain Diagram Stimulus x Vocal Response 158 Image Scanning (Brooks, cont.) Condition: Diagrammatic Stimulus & Vocal Response • Memorize the figure. Then it is removed. • Start your scan at the star and (mentally) move clockwise around the figure. • Say "OUT" when you reach an outside corner.. • Say "IN" when you reach an inside corner. • Correct response: out, out, out, in, in, out, out, in, out, out, out • Dependent variable: Response time (time to complete the task) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Explain Diagram Stimulus with Pointing Response 159 Image Scanning (cont.) • Next: Diagrammatic stimulus combined with pointing response: Stimulus Type Response Mode Pointing 28.2 9.8 Diagrams Sentences Next Slide Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Vocal 11.3 13.8 Previous Slide 160 Image Scanning (Brooks, cont.) Condition: Diagrammatic Stimulus & Pointing Response Stimulus • Memorize the figure. Then it is removed. Same as before • Start your scan at the * and (mentally) move clockwise around the figure. Same as before. • Point to "Out" when you reach an outside corner. • Point to "In" when you reach an inside corner.. • Correct response: (See diagram) out, out, in, in, out, out, in, out, out, out • Dependent variable: Response time (time to complete the task) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Respond by pointing to letters on this sheet. Transition to Next Condition: Sentence Stimulus & Vocal Response 161 Image Scanning (cont.) • Explain sentence stimulus combined with vocal response: Stimulus Type Diagrams Sentences Response Mode Pointing 28.2 9.8 Vocal 11.3 13.8 Next Slide Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Condition: Sentence Stimulus & Vocal Response 162 Image Scanning (Lee Brooks, cont.) Sentence Stimulus Condition: Sentence Stimulus & Vocal Response A bird in hand is worth two in the bush. • Memorize the sentence. Then it is removed. • Now work from the beginning to the end of the sentence. Say "yes" each time you encounter a noun; say "no" when you encounter a word that is not a noun. • Correct response: no, yes, no, yes, no, no, no, no, no, yes • Dependent variable: Response time (time to complete the task) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Transition to Condition with Sentence Stimulus & Pointing Response 163 Image Scanning (cont.) Condition: Sentence Stimulus & Vocal Response Stimulus Type Diagrams Sentences Response Mode Pointing 28.2 9.8 Vocal 11.3 13.8 Next Slide Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Sentence Stimulus x Pointing Response 164 Image Scanning (Lee Brooks, cont.) Condition: Sentence Stimulus & Vocal Response Sentence Stimulus: A bird in hand is worth two in the bush. • Memorize the sentence. Then it is removed. • Work from the beginning to the end of the sentence. Point to "yes" each time you encounter a noun; say "no" when you encounter a word that is not a noun.. • Correct response: no, yes, no, yes, no, no, no, no, no, yes Respond by pointing to letters on this sheet. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Image Scanning Results 165 Results: Image Scanning (Lee Brooks) Stimulus Type Diagrams Sentences Response Mode Pointing Vocal 28.2 11.3 Slower Faster 9.8 13.8 Faster Slower Same Slide: Why is Pointing Slower than Vocal For Diagrams & Opposite for Sentences? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 166 Results: Image Scanning (Lee Brooks) Stimulus Type Response Mode Diagrams Sentences • Why is Why is Pointing Vocal 28.2 11.3 Slower Faster 9.8 13.8 Faster Slower diagram/pointing sentence/vocal Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 slower than slower than diagram/vocal? sentence/pointing? Discussion of Results 167 Why is Diagram/Pointing Slower than Diagram/Vocal? Stimulus Type Diagrams Sentences Response Mode Pointing Vocal 28.2 11.3 Slower Faster 9.8 13.8 • Diagram/Pointing: The stimulus and response compete for a common cognitive resource, representation in VSP. Information processing bottleneck causes slower response. • Diagram/Vocal: Stimulus & response use separate cognitive resources. No bottleneck. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Why is sentence/vocal slower than sentence/pointing? 168 Why is Sentence/Vocal Slower than Sentence/Pointing? Stimulus Type Response Mode Pointing Vocal Diagrams 28.2 11.3 Sentences 9.8 13.8 Faster Slower • Sentence/Vocal: Again, stimulus and response compete for a common cognitive resource, representation in PL. Information processing bottleneck causes slower response. • Sentence/Pointing: Stimulus & response use separate cognitive resources. No bottleneck. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 xxx 169 Brooks' experiment supports the existence of a visuospatial sketch pad (VSP) because .... • If there were only one STM store (not separate PL & VSP), then the effect of the pointing response would be the same in the visuospatial task and the verbal task. Similarly for the effect of the verbal response. • WM model assumes multiple memory stores – this lets WM predict conflicts between similar mental codes. • The preceding experiment illustrates a basic principle: A response in one modality (verbal or spatial) will interfere more with a memory representation in the same modality than with a memory representation in a different modality. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Spatial Rehearsal in Visual Working Memory 170 Spatial Rehearsal in Working Memory – What Is It? • Spatial Rehearsal – maintaining information about a location in working memory Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Delayed-Match-To-Sample (Monkey Study) 171 Delayed-Match-To-Sample Paradigm (a) Cue (b) Delay (c) Reward (a) Monkey sees where food is located. (b) 10 second delay without visual input. (c) Monkey reaches for food (or makes a mistake and reaches in the wrong place). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Goldstein refers to this experimental task as the "delayed response task." See Figure 5.23, p. 143. Same Display – Single Cell Recordings Find Neural Correlates of (a), (b) & (c)172 Delayed-Match-To-Sample Paradigm (a) Cue (b) Delay (c) Reward Single-cell recording in monkey PFC shows a correlation between neural activity & the three stages of this task. ♦ Some neurons become active during the initial placement of the food. ♦ Some neuron become active only during the delay period (spatial rehearsal). ♦ Some neurons become active only when the response is made. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Display – Monkeys with PFC Lesions Cannot Do This Task 173 Delayed-Match-To-Sample Paradigm Right (a) Cue • Wrong (b) Delay (c) Reward Monkeys with frontal lesions cannot do this task. Human infants cannot do task until about 12 months old. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Multiple Location / Eye Movement Version of Delayed Response Task 174 Monkey Performance on Delayed Eye-Movement Task • Same idea as the delayed-match-to-sample task (preceding slide), except that there are multiple locations to remember, and the response is an eye movement. See Goldstein, Figure 5.24 (p. 144). + Target Stimulus + Delay Period + Eye Movement Response • The monkey's task is to see the target, wait until a response is permitted, and then move his eyes to the target position. He gets rewarded with a squirt of apple juice. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Single-Cell Recordings When Perceiving the Cue; Maintaining Attention; Responding 175 Funahashi, S., Bruce, C. J., & Goldman-Rakic, P. S. (1993). Dorsolateral prefrontal lesions and oculomotor delayedresponse performance: Evidence for mnemonic "scotomas." Journal of Neuroscience, 13, 1479-1497. • Neurons in DLPFC show sustained activity during delay period that is selective of the particular location to be remembered. • Errors occur when this sustained activity fails to initiate or decays before end of delay period. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Specific Lesions Cause Location-Specific Inability to Memory Loss 176 error Lesion • Lesions introduced into spatial memory areas cause location-specific inability to retain spatial information during the delay period. (Mnemonic scotoma). ♦ Perception for these locations is not impaired, i.e., this is not a blind spot. ♦ Memory for other locations is not impaired. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Neural Mind Reading 177 Neural Mind Reading • Neural Mind Reading - guessing what someone was thinking from the neural response. Neural mind reading of perceptual processing: fMRI used to guess which pattern a subject is viewing (Kamitani & Tong, 2005) ♦ On each trial, the subject views the pattern on left or the pattern on the right: OR ♦ Psychologists who are not told which stimulus was used on a given trial attempt to guess the stimulus based on fMRI image that was taken during that trial. ♦ Psychologists achieve accuracy of 75% - 100% depending on the stimulus pair. Guessing rate would be 50%. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Neural Mind Reading of Activity in VSP 178 Neural Mind Reading of Activity in VSP fMRI used to guess which pattern a subject is retaining in VSP (Harrison & Tong, 2009) ♦ On each trial, the subject views a sequence of screens. 2 Target 1 Target 2 Remember This Target fMRI Recording Test Clockwise or Stimulus Counterclockwise? 2 ♦ Psychologists who are not told which target was retained in VSP on a given trial attempt to guess the target based on fMRI image that was taken during that trial. ♦ Psychologists achieve accuracy of 80% (average). ♦ fMRI successfully detected VSP rehearsal of the target image. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Summary: Neuropsych Evidence for WM Components 179 Neuropsychological Evidence for WM Components • There is a short-term memory store (VSP) that is specific for visual imagery and spatial representations. ♦ Evidence for “spatial rehearsal” in VSP ♦ Single-cell recordings in monkey • Imaging studies of phonological loop: ♦ No one brain locus shows increased activity during rehearsal. ♦ Multiple brain areas that are associated with language show increased activity. • Evidence from cognitive impairments Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Table Comparing PL to VSP - Overview of Layout 180 Summary: Comparison Between PL & VSP Phonological Loop Visuospatial Sketchpad Common Characteristics Common Characteristics Differences Differences Psych 355, Miyamoto, Win '13 Comparison of PL & VSP - END 181 Summary: Comparison Between PL & VSP Phonological Loop Visuospatial Sketchpad • Limited capacity • Limited capacity • Information is retained by an active process (verbal rehearsal) • Information is retained by an active process (manipulation of mental imagery) • Information is highly accessible • Information is highly accessible • Multiple verbal tasks interfere with each other. • Multiple visual tasks interfere with each other. Verbal Task + Visual Task produces less interference than Verbal Task + Verbal Task or Visual Task + Visual Task • PL processes linguistic information; • VSP processes visual imagery and spatial information. Different areas of the brain show enhanced activity during verbal and visual/spatial rehearsal. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 END 182 Next: Lecture 05-3 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 183 The Central Executive Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 04/27/2016: Lecture 05-3 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • Brooks' Image Scanning Experiment - one last comment • The Central Executive • Introduction to Long-Term Memory Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 185 Response Sheet for the Pointing Response in Brooks' Image Scanning Experiment Condition: Diagrammatic Stimulus & Pointing Response Stimulus Response sheet as displayed in Goldstein Table 5.2 (p. 139) Respond by pointing to letters on this sheet. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Slide with Comment that the Response Sheet on Right is Correct 186 Response Sheet for the Pointing Response in Brooks' Image Scanning Experiment Condition: Diagrammatic Stimulus & Pointing Response Stimulus Response sheet as displayed in Goldstein Table 5.2 (p. 139) The actual response sheet looked more like this. Why use the irregular display as on the right? Respond by pointing to letters on this sheet. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Diagram for the Working Model - Point Out the Central Executive 187 Baddeley-Hitch Working Memory (WM) Model 1. Phonological Loop (PL) ♦ Short-term storage ♦ Rehearsal ♦ Manipulation of verbal information 2. Visuospatial Sketch Pad (VSP) ♦ ♦ Short-term storage of visual & spatial information Manipulation of visual images and spatial information. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 3. Central Executive o Directs activity within the PL or VSP. o Coordinates activity between PL and VSP, and between these components and long-term memory (LTM). Arguments for a Central Executive 188 Arguments for a Central Executive • Conceptual Argument: The brain somehow controls activity in WM. ♦ Let's give this controlling mental function a name: The Central Executive. ♦ Baddeley has called the central executive the "attention controller." ♦ Baddeley has also called the theory of the central executive "a ragbag." • Evidence from clinical neuropsychology: ♦ A variety of pathologies have been found that relate to the functions of the central executive. ♦ These pathologies are often related to injury to the frontal lobe of the brain. Especially, to the prefrontal cortex. ♦ Frontal lobe damage Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Stroop Task & Frontal Lobe Syndrome 189 Stroop Task • Name the color that the word is printed in. Ignore the meaning of the word. Compatible Condition Incompatible Condition BLUE GREEN RED BLACK GREEN RED etc BLUE GREEN RED BLACK GREEN RED etc • Obviously, the incompatible condition is harder (slower). • What does this have to do with executive processes? • Frontal lobe damage – much slower in the incompatible condition. Why? – Stroop task requires self-control. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Wisconsin Card Sort Task & Frontal Lobe Syndrome 190 Wisconsin Card Sort Task • Match new card to the “correct” old card. Old Cards • Subject guesses which old car matches the new card. New Card • Subject gets feedback, "correct" or "incorrect." Subject gradually learns the rule for "correct" response. • Criterion for “correct” old card keeps changing over blocks of trials. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Block 1: “Correct” responses based on matching shape. Block 2: “Correct” responses based on matching color. fMRI Study of Inhibition of Irrelevant Scene Stimuli 191 Wisconsin Card Sort Task • Normal performance: Subjects can learn to switch the criterion for a new block of trials. • Frontal lobe damage – normal performance on first block of trials, but they have great difficulty when the experimenter changes the rule. Block 1: “Correct” responses based on matching shape. Block 2: “Correct” responses based on matching color. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Self-Control & Working Memory 192 Self Control & Working Memory (WM) Hypothesis: • WM & central executive monitors current plans & goals. WM monitors adherence to these plans and goals. • If a task places extra load on WM, then adherence to plans and goals will suffer. • Mention study of dietary self-control and WM Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 fMRI Study of Inhibition of Irrelevant Information 193 fMRI Study of Inhibition of Irrelevant Information Remember Faces Just Watch Gazzaley, A., Cooney, J. W., Rissman, J., & D'Esposito, M. (2005). Top-down suppression deficit underlies working memory impairment in normal againg. Nature Neuroscience, 8, 1298-1300. fMRI measurement of brain activity in left parahippocampal/lingual gyrus (overlaps the parahippocampal place area/PPA). Specialized for place perception. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Definition of Face-Relevant & Passive Viewing Conditions 194 fMRI Study of Inhibition of Irrelevant Information Remember Faces Just Watch Face Relevant Condition: Remember faces; ignore scenes. Later tested for recognition of a face. Passive Condition: Simply view the stimuli. Later tested on whether the arrow points left or right. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Definition of Good Suppressors & Poor Suppressors 195 fMRI Study of Inhibition of Irrelevant Information Lower Lower Higher Higher Remember Faces Just Watch • Good Suppressors – People whose brain activity was less when the scene was irrelevant than when scene was passively viewed. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Slide - Add Definition of Poor Suppressors 196 fMRI Study of Inhibition of Irrelevant Information Higher Higher Lower Lower Remember Faces Just Watch • Good Suppressors – People whose brain activity was less when the scene was irrelevant than when scene was passively viewed. • Poor Suppressors – People whose brain activity was greater when the scene was irrelevant than when scene was passively viewed. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results of fMRI Study of Inhibition of Irrelevant Scene Stimuli 197 Results of fMRI Study of Inhibition of Irrelevant Information • Good suppressors are better at recognizing faces. • Proposed explanation: Good suppressors have better central executive function; they are better at inhibiting irrelevant information. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Summary re Frontal Lobe Syndrome & Central Executive 198 Frontal Lobe Damage & Impaired Functioning of the Central Executive • Central executive controls attention to relevant information and responses.Inhibits irrelevant information and responses. • Frontal lobe damage leads to difficulty inhibiting irrelevant information and responses. • Stroop task, Wisconsin card sort task, face recognition with irrelevant scenes: To respond correctly, you need to inhibit a response. People with frontal lobe damage have difficulty inhibiting tempting wrong responses. • People differ in how effective they are at inhibiting irrelevant information. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Return to Baddeley’s List of Central Executive Functions 199 Baddeley’s List of Functions of the Central Executive • Only partially understood. Very active area of current research. ♦ Alan Baddeley – chief developer of working memory theory (Baddeley calls the theory of the central executive a "ragbag") --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------• Controlling and allocating attention. • Coordinating current activity of working memory with goals. • Task switching. Multi-tasking. • Selection and launching of responses. • Inhibiting associated but inappropriate responses. • Controlling the interface between STM stores and LTM, especially LTM search & retrieval. • Chunking Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Introduction to Long-Term Memory 200 Wednesday, April 27, 2016: The Lecture Ended Here Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 201 Next: Lecture 05-4 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 202 Introduction to Long-Term Memory (LTM) Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 04/28/2016: Lecture 05-4 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline - Introduction to Long-Term Memory • Reminder: Distinction between STM and LTM • Different types of long-term memory ♦ Explicit versus implicit memory (declarative vs non-declarative memory) ♦ Episodic versus semantic memory ♦ Procedural memory ♦ Associative memory • HM – a famous clinical case; Illustrates many important aspects of memory • Evidence for distinction between STM & LTM • Evidence for distinction between episodic and semantic memory • Evidence for distinction between explicit memory and implicit memory. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Picture Showing the STM/LTM Distinction 204 Figure 6.1: Example of the STM/LTM Distinction LTM Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 STM Diagram of Modal Memory Model – Encoding, Retrieval & Consolidation205 Control Processes External World Sensory Store Short-Term Store Retrieval Encoding Long-Term Store Encoding, Retrieval & Consolidation • Encoding – creating an LTM out of currently processed information. • Retrieval – bringing information that is stored in LTM back to STM • Consolidation - creating a strong LTM by repeatedly retrieving and manipulating an LTM; and by associating it with other memories. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 List of Functions That Are Included in LTM 206 LTM Includes ..... • Important information about the self and events in the world, but also, ... • Trivial information about what has happened in the recent past, • “Semantic” knowledge, e.g., what is an apple, a pencil; which is bigger, a mouse or a moose; etc. • How to do things: Tie your shoes, drive a car, dial a phone number, cook a meal, .... • Learned associations that are not explicit, e.g., the atmosphere of a dentist’s office makes you feel apprehensive. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Diagram Showing the Major Components of the LTM System 207 Different Types of Long-Term Memory Figure 6.12. Different Types of Long-Term Memory • Declarative memory (explicit memory) – facts, knowledge, images • Non-declarative memory (implicit memory) – non-conscious memory that is expressed through change in behavior; it doesn’t necessarily include conscious recollection. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Intro to HM 208 HM – A Famous Clinical Case • HM – initials of a man See links to his biography on the Psych 355 website. • Intractable epilepsy. • August 25, 1953: Medial temporal lobes (left and right) were surgically resectioned to treat his epilepsy. Removal of the hippocampus. • Following surgery, HM had much milder symptoms of epilepsy, but ... ... he was found to have severe problems with memory. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 . Where is the Hippocampus? 209 This slide is based on instructional material that was downloaded from the Pearson Publishers website (http://vig.prenhall.com) for Smith & Kosslyn (2006; ISBN 9780131825086). Where is the Hippocampus? • HM underwent bilateral removal of much of the hippocampus, amygdala and surrounding medial temporal cortices. Amygdala Hippocampus Schematic head facing up. Hippocampi are in red. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 HM’s Memory Problem 210 HM’s Memory Post-Surgery • HM could carry on a conversation, understand current situations. • Severely impaired memory for any events occurring after brain injury. (Severe anterograde amnesia) • Some impaired memory for events occurring before injury. (Some retrograde amnesia) • Could learn new skills like sewing. • Could learn some new semantic information, e.g., his brain surgery was in 1953, but he learned that there was a president named Kennedy who was assassinated. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Diagram Showing Multiple Memory Systems 211 Episodic & Semantic Memory HUMAN MEMORY SHORT-TERM MEMORY Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Memory Terminology – Including Types of Amnesia 212 • Explicit memory (declarative memory) ♦ Episodic memory - memory for personal experiences ♦ Semantic memory - memory for facts • Implicit memory (non-declarative memory) ♦ Priming – exposure to one stimulus can affect ability to perform a cognitive task. ♦ Procedural memory - memory for how to do things, e.g., how to type at a computer. ♦ Associative and non-associative learning Discussed on Earlier Slide Some Memory Terminology • Amnesia ♦ Anterograde – amnesia for events occurring after brain injury. ♦ Retrograde - amnesia for events occurring before brain injury. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Back to HM’s Memory Problems 213 HM's Memory Problems • Anterograde amnesia – very severe; he could not form new permanent episodic memories. • Retrograde amnesia – very severe for preceding 4 days; some impairment up to 11 year preceding. ♦ Retrograde amnesia was temporally graded, i.e., less amnesia as you go farther into the past. ---------------------------------------------------- • Declarative memory – severely impaired ♦ ♦ Episodic memory – very severe Semantic memory – severe but he could still learn some new general facts. • Procedural memory – relatively intact ♦ ♦ HM learned to sew. HM learned to draw mirror images. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Diagram Showing that HM’s Memory Problem Pertains to Encoding 214 HM's Explicit Memory Problem Control Processes External World Sensory Store Short-Term Store Retrieval Encoding Long-Term Store (Remember that this diagram is an over-simplification) • HM's worst problem was encoding from STM (WM) to LTM. Impaired transfer from STM to LTM. • STM (WM) was still functioning because he could understand the current situation. • Note: This diagram omits the role of the hippocampus in consolidation (probably HM had difficulty with consolidation as well as encoding). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 STM/LTM Distinction and the Serial Position Curve 215 How Do We Know that STM and LTM Involve Different Brain Mechanisms? Figure 6.3 Serial Position Curve • Subject views list of 20 words, one word at a time. Each word is presented for 2 seconds. • After viewing the list, subject attempts to recall as many words as possible. % Recalled Evidence from the Serial Position Curve: Serial Position • Curve shows the percentage of times a word in each position was recalled correctly. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Interpretation of Standard Result for Serial Position Curve 216 Interpretation of Standard Result for Serial Position Curve Claims (to be substantiated in Figure 6.3 Serial Position Curve • Primacy effect is due to transfer to LTM. • Recency effect due to words retained in STM. • Standard result for serial position curve is evidence for STM/LTM distinction. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 % Recalled subsequent slides) Serial Position Primacy Effect Recency Effect How to Prove that Primacy is Due to Transfer to LTM? 217 How to Prove Primacy Effect Is Due to Transfer to LTM? • Rundus (1971) presented words at the rate of 1 word per 5 seconds. 20 words in the list. • Subjects were instructed to rehearse words aloud. What Subject Sees car stone What Subject Says car, car, car, ... car, stone, car, stone, car, ... top car, stone, top, car, stone, top, ... ...... ................... • This study has 2 dependent variables: ♦ Frequency of recall for words in each position ♦ Number of rehearsals for words in each position Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results for Rundus Experiment 218 Results for Rundus (1971) Study Figure 6.4 Effect of Overt Rehearsal Figure 6.4 to the right: • Blue dotted line: Number of times a word in each position was rehearsed. % Recalled (standard result) Number of Rehearsals • Red solid line: Serial position curve Serial Position • Blue dotted line correlates perfectly with the serial position curve (red dotted line) except for the recency effect. This supports claim that primacy effect is due to transfer to LTM. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 How to Prove that Recency Effect Due to Retention in STM? 219 How to Prove Recency Effect Is Due to Retention in STM? • Dashed line shows effect of counting backwards by 3’s for 30 seconds after presentation of list. • This result supports the hypothesis that the recency effect is due to retention of recent words in STM. mechanisms in free recall. Journal of Verbal Learning and Verbal Behavior, 5, 351-360. Figure 6.5 Effect of Counting Backwards % Recalled • Counting backwards prevents retention of words in STM, so recency effect disappears. Glanzer, M., & Cunitz, A. R. (1966). Two storage Serial Position No recency effect Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 How We Know that STM & LTM Are Different Mechanisms - Summary 220 How Do We Know that STM and LTM Involve Different Brain Mechanisms? (Conclusion) • Assumption of separate STM & LTM explains facts about the serial position curve. • Neuropsych evidence of double dissociation between STM & LTM. o o HM & Clive Wearing had normal memory span, e.g., 5-8 digits KF had reduced memory span, e.g., about 2 digits. HM, Clive Wearing K. F. STM LTM OK Impaired Impaired OK LTM was ok. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Surprise Memory Test Items 221 Next: Lecture 06-1 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 222 Episodic vs Semantic Memories Explicit vs Implicit Memory Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 05/02/2016: Lecture 06-1 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • What is the Evidence for the Distinction Between STM and LTM? • Episodic Memory and Semantic Memory Lecture probably ends here • What Builds Strong Memories? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 How Do We Know that STM & LTM Are Different Systems? Serial Position Curve 224 How Do We Know that STM and LTM Involve Different Brain Mechanisms? • Assumption of separate STM & LTM explains facts about the serial position curve. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Show Exp Results for Primacy & Recency 225 STM/LTM Distinction Explains Primacy & Recency Figure 6.4 Effect of Overt Rehearsal % Recalled % Recalled Number of Rehearsals Figure 6.5 Effect of Counting Backwards Serial Position No recency effect Serial Position Figure 6.5: Figure 6.4: • Red solid line: Serial position curve • Blue dotted line: Number of times a word in each position was rehearsed. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 • Dashed line shows effect of counting backwards by 3’s for 30 seconds after presentation of list. • Counting backwards prevents retention of words in STM, so recency effect disappears. How to Prove that Recency Effect Due to Retention in STM? 226 How Do We Know that STM and LTM Involve Different Brain Mechanisms? (Conclusion) • Assumption of separate STM & LTM explains facts about the serial position curve. • Neuropsych evidence of double dissociation between STM & LTM. o o HM & Clive Wearing had normal memory span, e.g., 5-8 digits KF had reduced memory span, e.g., about 2 digits. LTM was ok. HM, Clive Wearing K. F. STM LTM OK Impaired Impaired OK • Bottom Line: Most but not all cognitive psychologists accept that STM (WM) and LTM are different mechanisms. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Episodic vs Semantic Memory + Surprise Memory Test Items 227 Next: Episodic Memory vs Semantic Memory, But First, an Example (to be discussed later) ELK Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 SHIP PEAR Diagram of Memory Systems 228 Episodic & Semantic Memory Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Episodic vs Semantic Memory – Some Examples 229 Episodic versus Semantic Memory – Some Examples • "I remember parking my car this morning." E • "I remember the big earthquake in 1963." E • "I remember that wolves are bigger than coyotes." S • "I remember that Olympia is south of Seattle." S • "I remember Beth's telling me to be at the meeting on Thursday." E • “Barack Obama won the 2012 presidential election." maybe E, maybe S maybe both E • A subject in a memory experiment says, "I remember seeing the word, 'watermelon' on the list you showed me." Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Double Dissociations Between Episodic & Semantic Memory 230 Recall versus Recognition Tests • Recall Test: Can you remember the words that I displayed a few minutes ago? Write them down. • Recognition Test: Which of these words were displayed at the beginning of this lecture? Write “yes” or “no” depending on whether a word was or was not displayed at the beginning of the lecture. BOAT PEAR DEER etc. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Slide + Question: Do These Tests Involve Episodic or Semantic Memory? 231 Memory Performance on a Memory Test – Episodic or Semantic? • Recall Test: Can you remember the words that I displayed at the beginning of the lecture? Write them down. • Recognition Test: Which of these words were displayed at the beginning of this lecture? Write “yes” or “no” depending on whether a word was or was not displayed at the beginning of the lecture. • Is your memory performance on these tests an example of episodic memory or semantic memory? • Main Point: Recall and recognition tests require episodic memory because they require the subject to remember a specific previous experience. • Note that it requires semantic memory to answer, e.g., what is a ship? Is a pear a fruit? But these were not the questions that were asked. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Double Dissociations Btwn Episodic & Semantic Memory 232 Double Dissociations Between Episodic & Semantic Memory KC, HM Italian woman (KF) Semantic Episodic OK Impaired Impaired OK This table is similar to, but not quite identical to Table 6.4, p. 163, in Goldstein 4th ed. • Semantic memory intact; episodic memory impaired. o o Alzheimer's patient with intact semantic memory, and severely impaired episodic memory. Patient KC has injury to hippocampus. Lost his episodic memory, but retains semantic memory. • Semantic memory impaired; episodic memory intact o KF is a 44 year old Italian woman who had encephalitis. Impaired semantic memory, e.g., could not remember meaning of words on a shopping list; Intact episodic memory, e.g., could remember what she had done Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 fMRI Evidence for Episodic/Semantic Distinction 233 How Do We Know that Episodic and Semantic Memory Are Different Memory Systems? Figure 6.8 Yellow: Subject is recalling experiences (episodic). Blue: Subject is recalling facts (semantic). • Neuropsychological (fMRI) evidence for double dissociations between episodic & semantic memory. ♦ Pattern of activation is different while recalling episodic & semantic memories. ♦ It should be noted that there is overlap between episodic & semantic memories. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Back to Diagram of Memory Systems – Episodic Memory versus Priming 234 Tuesday, May 03, 2016: The Lecture Ended Here Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 235 Next: Lecture 06-2 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 236 Explicit vs Implicit Memory then .... What Builds Strong Memories? Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 05/03/2016: Lecture 06-2 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. First, an Example (to be discussed later) ELK Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 SHIP PEAR Diagram of Memory Systems 238 Outline • Episodic Memory and Semantic Memory • Explicit and Implicit Memory Lecture probably ends here • What Builds Strong Memories? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 Diagram of Memory Systems - Episodic Memory vs Priming 239 Episodic & Semantic Memory HUMAN MEMORY SHORT-TERM MEMORY Next Topic Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Word Fragment Completion Task - Simplified Version 240 Word Fragment Completion Task (Simplified Version) • Fill in the blanks to make a word: _NTE_OPE ANTELOPE • Fill in the blanks to make a word: _ATER_ _LON _ WATERMELON Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Word Fragment Completion Task - Full Experimental Design 241 Word Fragment Completion (WFC) Task Stage 1: Study List A apple pear watermelon ..... Study List B dog moose antelope ..... Stage 2 (explicit) Recall List A some forget "watermelon" Recall List B some forget "antelope" Stage 3 WFC Task WFC Task (implicit) _ater_ _lon _nte_ope _ater_ _lon _nte_ope Word Fragment Completion (WFC) Task: Fill in the blanks to make a word. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Goldstein 4th ed. calls this the "word completion task. Results for Word Fragment Completion Task 242 Results for WFC Stage 1: Study List A apple pear watermelon ..... Study List B dog moose antelope ..... Stage 2 (explicit) Recall List A some forget "watermelon" Recall List B some forget "antelope" Stage 3 WFC Task WFC Task (implicit) _ater_ _lon _nte_ope Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 better worse _ater_ _lon _nte_ope worse better Word Fragment Completion Task - SUMMARY 243 Word Fragment Completion (WFC) - Summary • WFC performance is better for words that were studied at Stage 1 but forgotten at Stage 2, than for words that were never studied at Stage 1. • Subjects have implicit memory for words studied at Stage 1 even if they cannot recall them at Stage 2. • WFC is an example of priming. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 WFC & Recall in Amnesics & Normal Controls 244 WFC & Recall for Amnesics & Normal Controls Graf, P., Shimamura, A. P., & Squire, L. R. (1985). Subjects ♦ Amnesics (anterograde): 8 Korsakoff patients 2 non-Korsakoff, ♦ 8 Non-Amnesic Alcoholics ♦ 8 Non-Amnesic, Non-Alcoholic Subject groups were similar in age. INPT ALC AMN Amnesics Non-Amnesic Alcoholics Non-Amnesic Non-Alcoholics Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 INPT ALC AMN Amnesics Non-Amnesic Alcoholics Non-Amnesic Non-Alcoholics Experimental Procedure & Results 245 WFC & Recall for Amnesics & Normal Controls Graf, P., Shimamura, A. P., & Squire, L. R. (1985). Subject read lists of words. For each list, ... 1) Subjects rated the words on a list on scale from 1 = “like extremely” to 5 = “dislike extremely”. INPT ALC AMN INPT ALC AMN 2) Recall Trials: Subjects attempted to recall the words. 3) Implicit Memory Trials: Subjects performed WFC with the words. Results: Amnesics do just as well as other groups on implicit memory (WFC) but do much worse on explicit memory (recall). Explicit Memory Implicit Memory Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Warrington & Weiskrantz: Korsakoff Patients Identify Incomplete Figures246 Errors Related Study by Warrington & Weiskrantz (Figures 6.11 & 6.12) Day of Training • Korsakoff patients were asked to identify incomplete pictures (pictures with parts of the objects erased). ♦ Patients were not asked: Have you seen this before? (explicit memory test) ♦ Patients were asked: What is it? (implicit memory test) • Over three days, the patients improved without remembering previous training or exposure to the stimuli. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Explicit & Implicit Memory Have Different Forgetting Curves 247 Episodic & Implicit Memory Show Different Patterns of Forgetting WFC % Correct • Tulving et al. (1982) studied recognition and WFC among normal subjects. Recognition 1 hour 7 days • Graph to right shows that recognition (episodic memory) and WFC (implicit memory) show different patterns of forgetting over time. • Bottom Line: Explicit (declarative) memory & implicit memory are based on different memory systems. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Diagram of Memory Systems Reminder that Most Memories Have Explicit & Implicit Aspects 248 Explicit vs Implicit Memory HUMAN MEMORY SHORT-TERM MEMORY Cognition experiments can target (measure) explicit or implicit memory, but ..... actual memories can have both explicit and implicit aspects to the memory Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Builds Strong Memories? 249 What Builds Strong Memories? • What are effective study habits? Students often want to know the answer to this question. • Some experiences are remembered easily and for a long time. Other experiences are forgotten. What is the difference? • Some scientific topics are remembered for a long time. Other topics are forgotten quickly. What is the difference? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Modal Model of Memory - Reminder of the Encoding, Retrieval & Consolidation 250 Control Processes External World Sensory Store Short-Term Store Retrieval Encoding Long-Term Store Encoding, Retrieval & Consolidation • Encoding – creating an LTM out of currently processed information • Retrieval – bringing information that is stored in LTM back to STM • Consolidation – a process that strengthens memories over time. Consolidation increases the chances for retrieval. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 In General, What Makes Memories Memorable? 251 In General, What Makes Memories Memorable? • Mere repetition (memorization) is ineffective. • What is effective? Next Elaboration & Association Generation of Related Thoughts Creating Related Mental Images Repeated Retrievals, Reprocessing, & Re-encoding Develop Retrieval Strategies and Retrieval Cues that Will Be Useful on Future Occasions Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Generation Effect 252 Generation Effect Generation effect: You are more likely to remember information that you retrieve or generate (during study) than information that you simply receive and attempt to “memorize.” Intuitive idea: • Mental activity at time of study promotes future recall. • Any ideas that you generate during study can serve as retrieval cues when you need to remember the information later. Generation Effect Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Anti-Passive Learning Mantyla Experiment: Self-Generated Stronger than Other-Generated Cues 253 Generating Semantic Associates Creates Strong Retrieval Cues Mantyla (1986): Purpose of Study: (a) to show that semantic associates that were present at study are effective cues for recall; (b) self-generated cues are the more effective cues for recall than are cues that someone else generates. Memory Task: Subjects study words. Later they are asked to recall them. 3 experimental conditions (next slide) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Mantyla (1986): Experimental Design 254 Mantyla (1986): Experimental Design Condition 1: Generate word cues at study; use them at test ♦ At study, list 3 words that are closely associated with each target word. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words and is asked to recall the stimulus word. (cued recall) Condition 2: See word cues at study; use them at test ♦ At study, see 3 associated words that were produced by a different subject along with each target word. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words and is asked to recall the target word. (cued recall) Condition 3: See no word cues at study; but use word cues at test ♦ At study, subject just sees the target words. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words that were produced by a different subject and is asked to recall the stimulus word. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Repeat this Slide with Examples of Condition 1 255 Mantyla (1986): Experimental Design Condition 1: Generate word cues at study; use them at test ♦ At study, list 3 words that are closely associated with each target word. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words and is asked to recall the stimulus word. (cued recall) Condition 2: See word cues at study; use them at test List 3 words that are What word isrelated related to: to “snow”: “white”, “cold”, ♦ At study, see 3 associated words that were produced “wet”? Uh – “white”, by a different subject along with each target word. “cold”, “wet” ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words and is asked to recall the target word. (cued recall) Condition 3: See no word cues at study; but use word cues at test ♦ At study, subject just sees the target words. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words that were produced by a different subject and is asked to recall the stimulus word. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Repeat this Slide with Examples of Condition 2 256 Mantyla (1986): Experimental Design Condition 1: Generate word cues at study; use them at test ♦ At study, list 3 words that are closely associated with each target word. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words and is asked to recall the stimulus word. (cued recall) Condition 2: See word cues at study; use them at test The word ♦ At study, see 3 associated words that were produced “snow” is by a different subject along with each target word. related to: ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words and is asked to recall“white”, “cold”, “wet". the target word. (cued recall) What word is related to: Condition 3: See no word cues at study; but use word cues at“white”, test “cold”, “wet”? ♦ At study, subject just sees the target words. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words that were produced by a different subject and is asked to recall the stimulus word. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Repeat this Slide with Examples of Condition 3 257 Mantyla (1986): Experimental Design Condition 1: Generate word cues at study; use them at test ♦ At study, list 3 words that are closely associated with each target word. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words and is asked to recall the stimulus word. (cued recall) Condition 2: See word cues at study; use them at test ♦ At study, see 3 associated words that were produced by a different subject along with each target word. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words and is asked to recall the target word. (cued recall) Condition 3: See no word cues at study; but use word cues atRemember test the word: “snow” ♦ At study, subject just sees the target words. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words that were produced What word is by a different subject and is asked to recall the stimulus word.related to: “white”, “cold”, “wet”? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Slide with Only Summary Descriptions Emphasized 258 Mantyla (1986): Experimental Design Condition 1: Generate word cues at study; use them at test ♦ At study, list 3 words that are closely associated with each target word. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words and is asked to recall the stimulus word. (cued recall) Condition 2: See word cues at study; use them at test ♦ At study, see 3 associated words that were produced by a different subject along with each target word. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words and is asked to recall the target word. (cued recall) Condition 3: See no word cues at study; but use word cues at test ♦ At study, subject just sees the target words. ♦ At test, subject is given the 3 associated words that were produced by a different subject and is asked to recall the stimulus word. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results 259 RESULTS Condition 1: 90% correct Condition 2: 55% correct Condition 3: 17% correct Condition 1: Generate cues; use cues Condition 2 See cues; use cues Condition 3 SUMMARY See no cues; use cues • Cues are helpful at time of test. • Cues that you have studied are even more helpful at time of test. Goldstein, Figure 7.9. Results from Mantyla (1986) • Cues that you generated yourself are even more helpful at time of test. • Why is this the pattern of memory results? ♦ Cues promote retrieval by means of associative connections. (Obvious) ♦ Generating our own cues helps us learn to access meaningful relationships. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Self-Reference Has Mnemonic Efficacy 260 Self-Reference Has Mnemonic Efficacy Principle: Self-referential relations are remembered better than items without self-referential relations. • "serene" - Does this word rhyme with "siren"? "serene" - Does this word describe you? weaker at test stronger at test • Ask yourself: ♦ Is this information related to me in any way? ♦ Does this information remind me of anything that has happened to me? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Mental Imagery Enhances Memory 261 Mental Imagery Enhances Memory • Principle: In general, images are remembered better than words. • Picture Superiority Effect: "tiger" Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 versus Experimental Demonstration of the Efficacy of Mental Images on memory 262 Mental Imagery Enhances Memory (Bower & Winzenz (1970) • Repetition Group: Repeated a word pair, e.g., "boat-treeboat-tree-boat-tree-...." • Imagery Group: Form a mental image in which the two objects are interacting. Both groups had 5 seconds per word pair. • Results: Imagery group remembered over twice as much in cued recall. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Figure 7.3 Experiment re Image Interaction & Bizarreness 263 Subjects had to learn word pairs that were accompanied by pictures. E.g., PIANO + CIGAR Interacting Wollen, K. A., Weber, A., & Lowry, D. H. (1972). Bizarreness versus interaction of mental images as determinants of learning. Cognitive Psychology, 3, 518523. Non-Interacting Effects of Image Interaction & Bizarreness Not Bizarre Bizarre • Pictures were either non-bizarre or bizarre. • Pictures were either non-interacting or interacting. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results for Interaction & Bizarreness 264 Memory was better for interacting images than noninteracting images. Bizarreness had no effect. Interacting Wollen, K. A., Weber, A., & Lowry, D. H. (1972). Bizarreness versus interac-tion of mental images as determinants of learning. Cognitive Psychology, 3, 518523. Non-Interacting Results for Image Interaction & Bizarreness Not Bizarre Bizarre Evidence suggests that in general, interacting images are a power mnemonic tool. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Why Does Generating Related Ideas Promote Future Memory? 265 Why Does Generating Ideas Improve Memory? • Ideas that you generate serve as retrieval cues. Ideas that you generate create associations with other ideas. Links to these ideas serve as retrieval cues. The more links you have to a concept, the more ways you have to access this information. • Mental imagery creates stronger retrieval cues than verbal descriptions. • The mental activity of discovering associations and relationships is itself a skill and a habit. ♦ Using this skill improves this skill. ♦ Using this habit strenthens this habit. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Class Problem: Suggest Ways to Strengthen a Memory About the Hippocampus - END 266 Class Exercise: Suggest How to Commit This to Memory COMMIT TO MEMORY: “Memories are not stored in the hippocampus, but the hippocampus is critical for packaging memories and for moving them into storage.” (Metaphor) --------------------------------------------------------------------------Generate some images or analogies that describe the functioning of the hippocampus. • Hippocampus is like a records clerk in a business. • Hippocampus is like a antique collector who has a very small shop with a very large warehouse. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 . END 267 Next: Lecture 06-3 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 268 Memorization is NOT a Good Learning Strategy Then, .... Testing, Spacing and Organization Promote Future Retrieval Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 05/04/2016: Lecture 06-3 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • Memorization is NOT an effective learning strategy. "memorization" = "maintenance rehearsal" (psychologists' word) • Depth of Processing Hypothesis • Testing effect - testing enhances future recall of tested material • The Spacing Effect Lecture probably ends here • Organizing the material strengthens memory for the memory • Illusions of Learning Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 Diagram for the Modal Model of Memory Emphasis on Processes that Strenghen Memories 270 Control Processes External World Sensory Store Short-Term Store Retrieval Encoding Long-Term Store Encoding, Retrieval & Consolidation • Encoding – creating an LTM out of currently processed information • Retrieval – bringing information that is stored in LTM back to STM • Consolidation – a process that strengthens memories over time. Consolidation increases the chances for retrieval. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 In General, What Makes Memories Memorable? 271 In General, What Makes Memories Memorable? • Mere repetition (memorization) is ineffective. Next • What is effective? Elaboration & Association Generation of Related Thoughts Creating Related Mental Images Repeated Retrievals, Reprocessing, & Re-encoding Develop Retrieval Strategies and Retrieval Cues that Will Be Useful on Future Occasions Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Generation Effect 272 Maintenance Rehearsal & Elaborative Rehearsal • Maintenance Rehearsal – repeating to-be-remembered information over and over (phonological loop) "Memorization" = Maintenance Rehearsal (cognitive psychologist's term) • Elaborative rehearsal – drawing connections between to-be-remembered information and other information, especially connections based on meaning. ♦ Memory for meaning ♦ Form associations between what you want to remember and other ideas, facts, concepts, etc. Create retrieval cues. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Mere Repetition is Ineffective for Strengthening Memory 273 Mere Repetition Is Ineffective for Strengthening Memory The amount of maintenance rehearsal has very little influence on the likelihood of correct recall. Craik & Watkins (1973): • Subjects heard sequences of words. Subjects task was to remember the most recent word in the list that started with a particular letter, e.g., "p". • Example: Study the following list of words: book,pin, car, tree, peach, dog, hat, ink, fog, post, bird, clock rehearse "pin" rehearse "peach" last "p" word Correct answer = "post" Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Continue Craik & Watkins (1973) – Differences in Number of Rehearsals 274 Mere Repetition Is Ineffective for Strengthening Memory book,pin, car, tree, peach, dog, hat, ink, fog, post, bird, clock rehearse "pin" rehearse "peach" last "p" word • At end of experiment, subjects were asked to recall as many of the words on the lists as they could remember. • Different "p" words are rehearsed a different number of times. ♦ E.g., "peach" is rehearsed more than "pin" because "peach" has 4 non-"p" words following it and "pin" has only 2 non-"p" words following it. • Finding: Likelihood of recall was unrelated to number of intervening non-p words, i.e., unrelated to the amount of maintenance rehearsal. ♦ Memorization is an ineffective learning strategy. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Maintenance vs Elaborative Rehearsal – Depth of Processing Hypothesis 275 Depth of Processing (Craik & Lockhart, 1972) • Depth of Processing Hypothesis: Depth of processing at time of study is the main determinant of ease of remembering. • Processing of to-be-remembered material proceeds from shallow features to deeper content. SHALLOW DEEP Letters in words Sound of words .... .... Meaning Relationship to other knowledge • Another way to state the depth of processing hypothesis: Speed of processing is slower but strength of memory trace is greater when encoding occurs at deeper levels of processing. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Test of Depth of Processing Hypothesis 276 Craik & Tulving Test of Depth of Processing Hypothesis Experimental Paradigm: On each trial, the subject sees a word and answers a question about the word. Condition 1 (very shallow processing): Example: Does the word “dungeon” contain the letter “t”? Condition 2 (moderately shallow processing): Example: Does the word “dungeon" rhyme with “engine"? Condition 3 (deeper processing of meaning): Example: Does the word “dungeon" fit into the sentence, “The prisoner was kept in a ______ for two years."? • Later the subject is asked to recall the words, and the percentage of correct recall is recorded. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results re Experiment 277 Results re Depth of Processing Hypothesis Finding: Reaction time is slower but percent correct recall gets better as processing gets deeper and deeper. ♦ Recall improves with deeper processing during study. ♦ Result supports depth of processing hypothesis. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Confounding of Depth of Processing with Encoding Duration 278 Confounding of Depth of Processing with Duration of Encoding Two confounded aspects of deep processing: 1. Deep processing takes longer than shallow processing (in general). 2. Deep processing emphasizes the meaning of the to-be-learned material and its relationship to other pieces of knowledge. Question: Does deeper processing produce better memory because it takes longer or because it emphasizes meaning? Answer: Clever experiments demonstrate it is the type of processing (meaning-based) and not the duration of processing that creates the stronger memory. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Outline of Effective Study Habits - END 279 Exception to Depth of Processing Hypothesis: Transfer-Appropriate-Processing Exception: Deeper processing at time of study is less effective if the memory test is based on cues that are not meaning related. Example: Transfer Appropriate Processing ♦ ♦ ♦ Shallow Study Task: Does the word “dungeon” contain the letter “t”? Moderate Study Task: Does the word “dungeon" rhyme with “engine"? Deeper Study Task: Does the word “dungeon" fit into the sentence, “The prisoner was kept in a ______ for two years."? • Test: Can you recall a word that rhymes with “luncheon”? • Result: Moderate study task produces best performance on this test because it focuses on word sound, i.e., the moderate study task requires transfer appropriate processing. • Usually, in everyday life, we need to retrieve information that is meaningfully related to a current problem, so focusing on meaning during study is usually more appropriate to the context of retrieval. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Makes Strong Memories? 280 In General, What Makes Memories Memorable? • Mere repetition (memorization) is ineffective. • What is effective? Elaboration & Association Generation of Related Thoughts Creating Related Mental Images Repeated Retrievals, Reprocessing, & Re-encoding Develop Retrieval Strategies and Retrieval Cues that Will Be Useful on Future Occasions Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 The Testing Effect 281 The Testing Effect • Testing memories strengthens memories, i.e., it increases the likelihood of retrieving the memories at a later time. ♦ It is not necessary to give the student feedback whether his or her answers are correct. ♦ This is true regardless of whether the subject succeeds in retrieving the information at the time of testing. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Roediger & Karpicke Experiment that Demonstrates the Testing Effect 282 Testing Improves Later Retrieval Recall test Recall test Delay Testing Group Read passage Solve math problems 7 minutes 2 minutes 7 minutes 5 minutes 2 days, or 1 week Reread passage Delay Recall test Rereading Group Figure 7.6 • Read prose passage for 7 minutes (study) Roediger & Karpicke (2006) • Solve math problem for 2 minutes. (take a break) • Testing group: Take a recall test for 7 minutes. Rereading group: Reread passage for 7 minutes. • Both groups get a recall test following a delay (5 minutes; 2 days; 1 week) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results from Roediger & Karpicke Study 283 Testing Improves Later Retrieval Recall test Recall test Delay Testing Group Read passage Solve math problems 7 minutes 2 minutes 7 minutes 5 minutes 2 days, or 1 week Reread passage Delay Recall test Rereading Group Figure 7.6 • Read prose passage for 7 minutes (study) Roediger & Karpicke (2006) • Solve math problem for 2 minutes. (take a break) • Testing group: Take a recall test for 7 minutes. Rereading group: Reread passage for 7 minutes. • Both groups get a recall test following a delay (5 minutes; 2 days; 1 week) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results from Roediger & Karpicke Study 284 • Rereading produces better memory after 5 minute delay. • Testing produces better memory after 2 day & 1 week delay. • The superiority of recall test increases over time. Proportion of Idea Units Recalled Results for the Roediger & Karpicke (2006) Study Rereading Testing 5 minutes 2 days 1 week Delay • Why does the recall test produce better memory (more successful retrieval) after the longer delays? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Why Does Testing Have Greater Advantage at Longer Delays? 285 • Explanation 1: Rereading the material strengthens the episodic memory for the experience of studying the target material. • Testing strengthens the semantic memory for associations between the target material and other knowledge. • Testing also strengthen priming between associated ideas and the target material. • Episodic memories lose strength faster than implicit memories and semantic memories. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Proportion of Idea Units Recalled Why Does Testing Improve Memory at Longer Delays? Rereading Testing 5 minutes 2 days 1 week Delay Typical mistake: People think that the primary goal of study is to encode the information. Explanation 2 for the Same Results 286 • Explanation 2: Retrieval is a mental skill – it improves with practice. • Attempting to retrieve information X helps you develop better retrieval cues for X. • Attempting to retrieve information X will consolidate the memory of X. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Proportion of Idea Units Recalled Why Does Testing Improve Memory at Longer Delays? Rereading Testing 5 minutes 2 days 1 week Delay Typical mistake: People think that the primary goal of study is to encode the information. Organizing the Material Increases the Chance of Future Retrieval 287 Goldstein’s Recommendations for Effective Study Habits Goldstein's recommendations are largely the same as the one's I listed earlier in this lecture. These recommendations largely orginate in the work of Robert Bjork, a UCLA cognitive psychologist. • Elaborate on the given information • Generate associations to other knowledge • Test yourself without an answer key in front of you • Organize the material in a meaningful way Next • Take breaks • Beware of "illusions of learning" • NOTICE: Memorization is NOT a recommended study habit! Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Organization Promotes Stronger Memory 288 Organizing the Information at Encoding Improves Later Retrieval • Principle: It is easier to remember information that is organized in some reasonable way than information that is disorganized. • Bower, Clark, Lesgold, & Winzenz (1969): Words that are organized into categories are remembered much better than the same words in a disorganized list. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Why Organizing Promotes Future Retrieval 289 Why Organization Promotes Future Retrieval • Professors will tell you: “Try to understand the material! Don’t just memorize it.” • The effort to organize the material has mnemonic value because: (i) Organizing the material causes the subject to chunk the material. It is easier to retrieve a few chunks than many separate pieces of information. (ii) Organizing the material generally requires linking it to other knowledge. These links serve as retrieval cues. (iii) Generating your own organization is more beneficial than having someone else give you an organization. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 The Spacing Effect 290 The Spacing Effect • Massed practice: Many trials with the same stimuli are undertaken without interruption. • E.g., study for 2 hours straight. • Distributed practice: Trials with the same stimuli are separated by periods with other activities. • Study for 30 minutes, take a 10 minute break (think about something else), • Study for 30 minutes, take a 10 minute break (think about something else), • Study for 30 minutes, take a 10 minute break (think about something else), • Study for 30 minutes, take a 10 minute break (think about something else). • Spacing Effect: Distributed practice produces stronger memories than massed practice. • Why does the spacing effect occur? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Overview Diagram: Effective Study Methods 291 FACTORS THAT AID ENCODING & RETRIEVAL Active Memory Organization Create Connections Generate related ideas Interactive Imagery (boat-tree) Link to self (self-reference effect) Testing Recall by groups i.e., recall related items together Present in an organized way (“tree” experiment) Meaningful framework (“balloon” experiment) Goldstein (2014), Figure 7.5, p. 184 Repeat Goldstein's Recommendations for Study - Emphasis on Illusions of Learning Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 292 Goldstein’s Recommendations for Effective Study Habits • Elaborate on the given information • Generate associations to other knowledge • Test yourself without an answer key in front of you • Organize the material in a meaningful way • Take breaks • Beware of "illusions of learning" Next • NOTICE: Memorization is NOT a recommended study habit! Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Illusions of Learning 293 Illusions of Learning • Illusions of learning - some study habits produce a false impression of having learned something. • Immediate testing versus delayed testing. ♦ Immediate testing: Test immediately after a period of study. ♦ Delayed testing: Test after a delay of 20 minutes. ♦ Students who engage in immediate testing feel more confident that they have learned the material than students who engage in delayed testing. ♦ Students who engage in immediate testing later perform worse than students who engage in delayed testing. • Rereading the material give students greater confidence that they know the material then testing, but it actually leads to lower performance. • Goldstein has other examples. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 END 294 Next: Lecture 06-4 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 295 Consolidation of Memories Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 05/05/2016: Lecture 06-4 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • Consolidation of memories • Standard model of consolidation (Alternative theory: The multiple trace model of consolidation) Lecture probably ends here • Disruption of memory reconsolidation as a treatment for PTSD Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 Consolidation of Memories 297 Consolidation of Memories • Recently created memories are typically fragile. ♦ Without additional retrievals, they are often too weak to retrieve. ♦ A concussion soon after learning can cause permanent loss of a memory. ♦ Fragility of new memories implies that it takes cognitive processing after the initial experience to create a strong memory. Goldstein, Figure 7.16 Typical pattern of retrograde amnesia. The recent past is the least consolidated it is the most likely to be lost. More distant past is more consolidated - it is more likely to be preserved. • Consolidation is the process by which a memory is transformed from an unstable state to a more permanent state. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Is Happening During Consolidation? 298 What Is Happening During Memory Consolidation? Changes are happening at two levels: • Synaptic Consolidation: Repeated experience causes changes at the level of the synapse. ♦ These changes occur quickly, over a matter of minutes. • Systems Consolidation: Repeated retrievals cause changes in the organization of neural circuits that represent memories. ♦ These changes occur gradually, over days, months or even years. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Synaptic Changes During Learning – Long-Term Potentiation 299 Synaptic Consolidation Goldstein (2014), Figure 7.14, p. 194 Structural Changes Increased firing (LTP) 1st Presentation of Stimulus Continued Presentation of Stimulus After Many Presentations of Stimulus Long-Term Potentiation (LTP): Structural changes at synapse result in increased firing to the same stimulus. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Diagram without Emphasis Rectangles 300 Synaptic Consolidation Goldstein (2014), Figure 7.14, p. 194 Structural Changes Increased firing (LTP) 1st Presentation of Stimulus Continued Presentation of Stimulus After Many Presentations of Stimulus Long-Term Potentiation (LTP): Structural changes at synapse result in increased firing to the same stimulus. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 System Consolidation - Long-Term Process of Memory Formation 301 System Consolidation: The Time Course of Memory Formation Figure 7.15 (p. 195) attempts to explain the role of the hippocampus in the encoding and consolidation of memories. Cortical Areas Hippocampus Hippocampus Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Cortical Areas Hippocampus Cortical Areas Hippocampus Same Diagram – Emphasis Rectangle on Left 302 The Time Course of Memory Formation Initial Encoding of Current Experience Cortical Areas Hippocampus Hippocampus Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Cortical Areas Hippocampus Cortical Areas Hippocampus Same Diagram – Emphasis Rectangle on Middle 303 The Time Course of Memory Formation Retrieval of Episodic Memory Cortical Areas Hippocampus Hippocampus Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Cortical Areas Hippocampus Cortical Areas Hippocampus Same Diagram – Emphasis Rectangle on Right 304 The Time Course of Memory Formation Retrieval (After Much Learning) of Episodic Memory Cortical Areas Hippocampus Hippocampus Cortical Areas Hippocampus Cortical Areas Hippocampus Transition to Diagrams That Show the Same Process But With Different Graphics Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 305 The next slides display the same ideas as the preceding slides, but with more informative graphics. The next set of slides show: The Standard Model of Memory Consolidation Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Explanation of Consolidation in terms of Brain Diagrams 306 This slide is based on instructional material that was downloaded from the Pearson Publishers website (http://vig.prenhall.com) for Smith & Kosslyn (2006; ISBN 9780131825086). Encoding Event or episode 1: Processing of current information activates different brain areas in occipital, parietal, temporal and frontal cortex. 2: Multiple brain activations spread to hippocampus (convergence zone). Event or episode Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Somehow, hippocampus binds multimodal inputs together and encodes long-term memory. Diagram of Brain Activity During Retrieval 307 This slide is based on instructional material that was downloaded from the Pearson Publishers website (http://vig.prenhall.com) for Smith & Kosslyn (2006; ISBN 9780131825086). Retrieval 3: At time of recall, partial cues stimulate some brain areas that were also activated at encoding. Partial cue 4: Activation spreads to the hippocampus. 5: Somehow, the hippocampus triggers pattern completion (partial reactivation of original activation pattern). Partial cue Partial cue Same Diagram with Statement of Recapitulation Hypothesis Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 308 Retrieval This slide is based on instructional material that was downloaded from the Pearson Publishers website (http://vig.prenhall.com) for Smith & Kosslyn (2006; ISBN 9780131825086). Reactivation Hypothesis: (Goldstein, p. 195) Episodic retrieval involves reinstatement of activations that were present during encoding. Hippocampus plays an important role in reactivation. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Reactivation Before & After Consolidation 309 Standard Model of Consolidation: Retrieval BEFORE consolidation has been completed. Retrieval AFTER consolidation has been completed. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Multiple Trace Model of Consolidation 310 Multiple Trace Model of Consolidation • Multiple trace model is opposed to the standard model of consolidation. • According to this model, the hippocampus is involved in retrieval of remote episodic memories as well as recent episodic memories, but only if they are not semanticized. • Semanticization of Episodic Memories & the Remember/Know Distinction ♦ Hippocampus is active during retrieval of remote episodic memories that the subjects "remember", but not during the retrieval of memories that the subjects "know" are true, but don't "remember". ♦ Intuitive ideas: Over time, memories can become facts (as opposed to retrieval of experiences). Retrieval of facts may not involve the hippocampus to the same degree as retrieval of experiences. ○ This is called the semanticization of memories (transformation of a memory from being episodic to being semantic). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Consolidation & Reconsolidation 311 Consolidation & Reconsolidation • Fact to be discussed later in this lecture: ♦ When a memory is retrieved, it is vulnerable to change. ♦ After retrieval of a memory, it is necessary to store the memory again to return it to a permanent state. • Consolidation refers to processes that change an initially encoded memory into a permanent memory. • Reconsolidation refers to processes that restore a memory to a more permanent form after it has been retrieved. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Sometimes consolidation & reconsolidation are referred to together as “consolidation.” Role of Sleep in Consolidation 312 Interestingly Enough, ..... • Sleep (dreaming?) plays a functional role in promoting consolidation. ♦ Rat brain cells that fire together while exploring a location also show increased firing during subsequent sleep. Not true of other cells that did not fire during exploration. ♦ Disruption of dreaming seems to disrupt consolidation. ♦ Similar effects with humans who are learning to play tetris. • Some evidence suggests that if a subject expects to be tested on Topic A but not on Topic B, then sleep (possibly, dreaming) enhances future memory of Topic A more than Topic B. • Role of sleep in consolidation is not understood, but there seems to be a significant relationship between sleep and consolidation. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Summary of Standard Model of Consolidation 313 Summary re Standard Model of Consolidation Consolidation & reconsolidation ... ... long-term memory representations become more stable over time; ... hippocampus plays a central role in retrieval of incompletely consolidated memories; ... over time, retrieval of memories becomes independent from the hippocampus and other medial temporal lobe activity. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Memory Representations are Malleable at Time of Retrieval 314 Memories Representations Are Malleable At Time of Retrieval • Hypothesis: When memories are retrieved, they are vulnerable to change. • Under special circumstances, when memories are retrieved, memories can be altered, even wiped out. ♦ Can these ideas be used to develop a treatment for PTSD? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Undoing Fear Conditioning in the Rat 315 Undoing Fear Conditioning in the Rat Nader, K., Schafe, G. E., & Le Doux, J. E. (2000). Fear memories require protein synthesis in the amygdala for reconsolidation after retrieval. Nature, 406, 722-726. • If a tone is paired with an electric shock, a rat will learn to freeze when it hears the tone (classical conditioning of fear). • Anisomycin – antibiotic that inhibits protein synthesis that is required in the formation of new memories. • Administering anisomycin to a rat can cause it to fail to learn. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Experimental Design (Diagram of Rat Learning or Unlearning) 316 Experimental Design Condition 1: Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 1: Tone + Shock + anisomycin Day 2: No drug; no tone; no shock Day 3: Does not freeze to tone (shows no learning) Condition 2: Day 1: Tone + Shock Day 2: Drug; no tone; no shock Day 3: Freezes to tone (shows learning) Condition 3: Day 1: Tone + Shock Day 2: Drug + tone, no shock. Day 3: Does not freeze to tone (shows no learning) Figure 7.20 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Repeat This Slide with Emphasis Rectangles 317 Experimental Design Condition 1: Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 Day 1: Tone + Shock + anisomycin Day 2: No drug; no tone; no shock Day 3: Does not freeze to tone (shows no learning) Condition 2: Day 1: Tone + Shock Day 2: Drug; no tone; no shock Day 3: Freezes to tone (shows learning) Condition 3: Day 1: Tone + Shock Day 2: Drug + tone, no shock. Day 3: Does not freeze to tone (shows no learning) Figure 7.20 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Summary of Results 318 Summary of Main Finding Condition 1: Day 1: Tone + Shock + anisomycin Day 2: No drug; no tone; no shock Day 3: Does not freeze to tone Combining drug with tone & shock on Day 1 prevents fear conditioning. (shows no learning) Condition 2: Day 1: Tone + Shock Day 2: Drug; no tone; no shock Day 3: Freezes to tone Drug on Day 2 does not undo fear conditioning. (shows learning) Condition 3: Day 1: Tone + Shock Day 2: Drug + tone, no shock. Day 3: Does not freeze to tone (shows no learning) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Combining drug with retrieval of fear conditioning on Day 2 undoes fear conditioning. Retrieval Makes Day 1 Learning Vulnerable to Change 319 Interpretation • Retrieval makes the fear conditioning from Day 1 vulnerable to change. Combining retrieval with drug prevents reconsolidation of memory of fear conditioning, thereby causing loss of conditioning. Condition 3 displayed to the right: Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 • Nader et al. (2000) state that the memory trace is "labile" during retrieval, i.e., its form can be changed at that time. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Using Fragility of Memories During Retrieval to Treat PTSD 320 Note Added After the Lecture on Thursday 05/05/2016 The following slides pertaining to the treatment of PTSD are the same as the ones that were displayed in class, but an improved version of these slides will be presented on Monday 05/09/2016. You should use the Monday slides because they are more clear. Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 321 Using the Fragility of Memories During Retrieval to Treat PTSD Brunet, A., Orr, S. P., Tremblay, J., Robertson, K., Nader, K., & Pitman, R. K. (2008). Effect of postretrieval propranolol on psychophysiologic responding during subsequent script-driven traumatic imagery in post-traumatic stress disorder. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 42, 503-506. • Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD): Strong fear and stress responses are evoked by reminders of the initial traumatic event. • Brunet et al. asked whether human PTSD patients can lose or at least diminish their fear and stress conditioning by techniques that are similar to Nader et al.'s demonstration that rats can lose their fear conditioning. ♦ Study used propranolol, a drug that is used to prevent traumatic memories if administered immediately following a traumatic event. Propranolol reduces the fear & stress conditioning of trauma. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Brunet et al.'s Subjects Were PTSD Patients 322 Brunet et al.'s Study of PTSD Subjects • PTSD patients: Childhood sexual abuse, motor vehicle accident, rape, being taken hostage. ♦ Comorbid mental disorders included: major depressive disorder, panic disorder, social phobia, bulimia, generalized anxiety disorder. • Two scripts were prepared for each patient that described the events that produced the trauma for that patient. • 19 PTSD patients were randomly assigned to either a treatment condition or a placebo control condition. ♦ Both Conditions: Patient hears a 30-second recording describing their traumatic experience. ♦ Treatment Condition: Patient is injected with propranolol immediately following recording. ♦ Control Condition: Patient is injected with a placebo that has no active ingredients. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Test of Treatment - Was It Efficacious? 323 Test of Treatment • One week later, the patients listened to a taped version of the scripts that described their traumatic experience, and are asked to imagine the traumatic events while listening to the tape. ♦ Physiological measures of stress and anxiety are taken while patients listen to the tape. • Question: When the patients hear the taped version of traumatic experience, will they experience fear, anxiety, etc. of PTSD? ♦ I.e., has the drug treatment reduced or eliminated their tendency to associate fear responses with these memories. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Analogy Between Rat Conditioning and PTSD Treatment 324 Analogy Between PTSD Treatment & Conditioning HUMAN Traumatic experience Listen to taped description of traumatic experience RAT Tone + shock conditioning in the rat Rat hears tone without the shock Injection of propranolol immediately after recall Injection of anisomycin immediately after rat hears tone Later, will the human seem to have unlearned the fear conditioning to the traumatic memories? Later, the rat seems to have unlearned the fear conditioning to the tone. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Experimental Results 325 Tensing of Frowning Muscles Y-Axis Are Z-Scores Relative to Base Rate Brunet et al. Results Heart Rate Skin Conductance Corrugator EMG • Grey = placebo group; Black = propranolol group • Result: Therapy reduces original fear conditioning. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Return to Malleability of Memory During Retrieval 326 Tensing of Frowning Muscles Y-Axis Are Z-Scores Relative to Base Rate Brunet et al. Results Heart Rate Skin Conductance Corrugator EMG • Grey = placebo group; Black = propranolol group • Result: Therapy reduces original fear conditioning. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Return to Malleability of Memory During Retrieval 327 Thursday, May 05, 2016: The Lecture Ended Here Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 328 Next: Lecture 07-1 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 329 Retrieval, Memory Modification and The Cycle of Consolidation Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 05/09/2016: Lecture 07-1 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • Brunet’s treatment of unwanted memories in PTSD patients. • The cycle of consolidation Lecture probably ends here • Introduction to autobiographical memory Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 OLD SLIDE: Nader’s Method for Undoing Fear Conditioning 331 Undoing Fear Conditioning in the Rat Skim past: Nader, K., Schafe, G. E., & Le Doux, J. E. (2000). Fear memories require protein synthesis in the amygdala for reconsolidation after retrieval. Nature, 406, 722-726. • If a tone is paired with an electric shock, a rat will learn to freeze when it hears the tone (classical conditioning of fear). • Anisomycin – antibiotic that inhibits protein synthesis that is required in the formation of new memories. • Administering anisomycin to a rat can cause it to fail to learn. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Experimental Design (Diagram of Rat Learning or Unlearning) 332 Summary of Main Finding Skim past: Condition 1: Day 1: Tone + Shock + anisomycin Day 2: No drug; no tone; no shock Day 3: Does not freeze to tone Combining drug with tone & shock on Day 1 prevents fear conditioning. (shows no learning) Condition 2: Day 1: Tone + Shock Day 2: Drug; no tone; no shock Day 3: Freezes to tone Drug on Day 2 does not undo fear conditioning. (shows learning) Condition 3: Day 1: Tone + Shock Day 2: Drug + tone, no shock. Day 3: Does not freeze to tone (shows no learning) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Combining drug with retrieval of fear conditioning on Day 2 undoes fear conditioning. Retrieval Makes Day 1 Learning Vulnerable to Change 333 Interpretation • Retrieval makes the fear conditioning from Day 1 vulnerable to change. Combining retrieval with drug prevents reconsolidation of memory of fear conditioning, thereby causing loss of conditioning. Condition 3 displayed to the right: Day 1 Day 2 Day 3 • Nader et al. (2000) state that the memory trace is "labile" during retrieval, i.e., its form can be changed at that time. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Using Fragility of Memories During Retrieval to Treat PTSD 334 Using the Fragility of Memories During Retrieval to Treat PTSD Brunet, A., Orr, S. P., Tremblay, J., Robertson, K., Nader, K., & Pitman, R. K. (2008). Effect of postretrieval propranolol on psychophysiologic responding during subsequent script-driven traumatic imagery in post-traumatic stress disorder. Journal of Psychiatric Research, 42, 503-506. Skim past: • Post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD): Strong fear and stress responses are evoked by reminders of the initial traumatic event. • Brunet et al. asked whether human PTSD patients can lose or at least diminish their fear and stress conditioning by techniques that are similar to Nader et al.'s demonstration that rats can lose their fear conditioning. ♦ Study used propranolol, a drug that is used to prevent traumatic memories if administered immediately following a traumatic event. Propranolol reduces the fear & stress conditioning of trauma. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Brunet et al.'s Subjects Were PTSD Patients 335 Brunet et al.'s Study of PTSD Subjects Skim past: • PTSD patients: Childhood sexual abuse, motor vehicle accident, rape, being taken hostage. ♦ Comorbid mental disorders included: major depressive disorder, panic disorder, social phobia, bulimia, generalized anxiety disorder. • Two scripts were prepared for each patient that described the events that produced the trauma for that patient. • 19 PTSD patients were randomly assigned to either a TREATMENT Condition or a CONTROL Condition. (Conditions described on next slide.) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Test of Treatment - Was It Efficacious? 336 Brunet et al.'s Study: Treatment and Control Conditions Patient hears recorded description of traumatic experience Patient is injected with propranolol. 7 Days Patient is injected with placebo. 7 Days Patient hears another recorded description of traumatic experience Patient hears another recorded description of traumatic experience Measure anxiety Measure anxiety Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Test of Treatment - Was It Efficacious? 337 Test of Treatment Skim past: • One week later, the patients listened to a taped version of the scripts that described their traumatic experience, and are asked to imagine the traumatic events while listening to the tape. ♦ Physiological measures of stress and anxiety are taken while patients listen to the tape. • Question: When the patients hear the taped version of traumatic experience, will they experience fear, anxiety, etc. of PTSD? ♦ I.e., has the drug treatment reduced or eliminated their tendency to associate fear responses with these memories. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Analogy Between Rat Conditioning and PTSD Treatment 338 Analogy Between PTSD Treatment & Conditioning HUMAN Traumatic experience Listen to taped description of traumatic experience Injection of propranolol immediately after recall RAT Tone + shock conditioning in the rat Rat hears tone without the shock Injection of anisomycin immediately after rat hears tone ? Later, will the human seem to have unlearned the fear conditioning to the traumatic memories? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Later, the rat seems to have unlearned the fear conditioning to the tone. Experimental Results 339 Tensing of Frowning Muscles Y-Axis Are Z-Scores Relative to Base Rate Brunet et al. Results Heart Rate Skin Conductance Corrugator EMG • Grey = placebo group; Black = propranolol group • Result: Therapy reduces original fear conditioning. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Return to Malleability of Memory During Retrieval 340 Tensing of Frowning Muscles Y-Axis Are Z-Scores Relative to Base Rate Brunet et al. Results Heart Rate Skin Conductance Corrugator EMG • Grey = placebo group; Black = propranolol group • Result: Therapy reduces original fear conditioning. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Return to Malleability of Memory During Retrieval 341 Malleability of Memories During Retrieval • Learned associations can be lost during retrieval ♦ Rats unlearned tone-shock connection ♦ Humans unlearn (to some degree) the association between a traumatic episodic memory and the emotional response. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 This Slide + Retrieval Strengthens Memory (Consolidation/Reconsolidation) 342 Malleability of Memories During Retrieval • Learned associations can be lost during retrieval • Consolidation & Reconsolidation – Memories can be strengthened during retrieval. ♦ Thinking about something produces better future recall. ♦ Practice testing (retrieval) produces better future recall. ♦ The memory becomes more primed, i.e., more easily retrieved as an associate of something else. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 This Slide + Query: Do These Facts Contradict Each Other? 343 Malleability of Memories During Retrieval • Learned associations can be lost during retrieval • Consolidation & Reconsolidation – Memories can be strengthened during retrieval. • Do these results contradict each other? No! • Stored representations can change during retrieval. ♦ Usually the change makes the memory stronger, better organized, more linked to other memories. The memory becomes more primed, i.e., more easily retrieved as an associate of something else. ♦ The opposite can also happen, ○ ○ E.g., rats unlearn their fear conditioning, or humans become desensitized to memories of trauma. This is a special case that is based on the injection of drugs that would not normally be present. E.g., while we think about past events, i.e., during retrieval, we may distort the facts or even falsify what was once a true memory. Psychologists believe that this happens to everyone. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Conclusions re Consolidation 344 Conclusion re Consolidation • Consolidation occurs through reactivation of memories, followed by re-encoding of the memories. • Hippocampus plays a major role in reactivation of recent episodic memories. ♦ Standard Model of Consolidation: After the memories have been consolidated, the hippocampus plays a reduced role in retrieval of episodic memories. ♦ Multiple Trace Model of Consolidation: After the memories have been consolidated, the hippocampus plays a reduced role in retrieval of episodic memories that have been semanticized (turned into semantic memories, i.e., “remember” the memory), but not for episodic memories that continue to be episodic, i.e., “know” that this is what happened. • Memories are malleable during or shortly after retrieval. • PBS video titled “Memory Hackers”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xS_OiKvoqbo Excellent discussion of how memories are created. Thank you, Lindsay. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 The Cycle of Consolidation 345 The Cycle of Consolidation Cycle of consolidation (JM’s term): ♦ Repeatedly retrieving some memories. ♦ Possibly modifying the memories. ♦ Reconsolidating the memories, possibly with modifications. • The cycle of consolidation happens spontaneously in many different situations. Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Image of a Man Thinking About a Conflict with Significant Other 346 Not-So-Instant Replay of Interpersonal Conflict ... ... ... ... ... she ...,doesn’t etc., etc., careetc., if PQR! ... I asked hersaid why EFG? but she soABC! Ithinks said XYZ. she JKL. ... ... ... ... ... Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Image of a Man Thinking About How to Compute a T-Test 347 Statistics Problem Solving ... ... ...... ... the difference the etc., What’s between the foretc., SE(X... ̅ 1 – X̅2)? ..., formula etc., Does itWhat’s matter ifT-test? the How do I calculate aare What the degrees of deviation and the standard error? ... samplestandard sizes different? ... are freedom of ... SSpooled? ... ... Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Dwelling On Something Involves Lots of Retrievals – END 348 Dwelling on Something Usually Involves Lots of Retrieval • Retrieval creates a the potential for modification of memories. • Retrieval induced memory change happens very often. • We spontaneously engage in thinking patterns that cause retrieval-induced memory change. This is the cycle of consolidation. ♦ Retrieval induced memory change is not just a tool for better study habits. ♦ Retrieval induced memory change is not just a tool for clinical modification of memories. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 END – OR – Start Autobiographical Memory 349 Autobiographical Memory (AM) • Autobiographical memories are memories of one's personal experiences and history. • Many autobiographical memories include episodic memories. ♦ E.g., I remember listening to a lecture on statistical theory last week, i.e., I remember where I was sitting in the room, who was around me, etc. • Many autobiographical memories include semantic memories. ♦ E.g., I remember the name of my elementary school, but the name isn’t connected to a particular experience. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 AM & Mental Imagery 350 AM & Mental Imagery • AM’s often include memories of visual, auditory, olfactory or haptic aspects of the memory. ♦ Memory of a place might include a visual memory. ♦ Memory of food might include visual or olfactory aspects. • Greenberg and Rubin (2003) ♦ Patients who cannot recognize objects also experience loss of autobiographical memory ♦ Visual experience plays a role in forming and retrieving AM Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Do AM’s Involve Distinct Patterns of Brain Activity? 351 Do AM’s Involve Distinct Patterns of Brain Activity? • Subjects (Duke undergrads) took photos of campus landmarks. • Later subjects viewed photos during fMRI scan. OWN Photos: Photos taken by the subject. LAB Photos: Photos taken by someone else, not by the subject. Figure 8.1 Goldstein, p. 209, based on Cabeza, Prince, Daselaar, Greenberg, Budde, Dalcos, et. al. (2004). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 fMRI Results for OWN and LAB Photos (text description) 352 fMRI Results for OWN Photos & LAB Photos • Both types of photos activated similar brain structures ♦ Medial temporal lobe (MTL) (typical of episodic memory) ♦ Parietal cortex (typical of scene processing) • OWN-photos activated more of the ♦ Prefrontal cortex (PFC) (information about self) ♦ Hippocampus (recollection) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 These interpretations involve theory (intelligent guesswork). fMRI Results for OWN and LAB Photos (fMRI Images) 353 fMRI Images that Support Interpretation on Preceding Slide (a) Parietal cortex (c) Hippocampus Figure 8.2. fMRI response in three brain regions. • Yellow lines: Response to OWN photos • Blue lines: Response to LAB photos (b) Prefrontal cortex (PFC) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 • OWN photos produce stronger response than LAB photos in PFC & hippocampus. END 354 Next: Lecture 07-2 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 355 Flashbulb Memories then: The Role of Schemas in Memory Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 05/10/2016: Lecture 07-2 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • Flashbulb memories ♦ How do they change over time? ♦ Are they based on different mechanisms than everyday memories • The role of schemas in memory ("schemas" a.k.a. "schemata") Lecture probably ends here • Source monitoring and memory errors Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 What Are Flashbulb Memorise? 357 Flashbulb Memories (FBM's) • Hypothesis: Memory for a dramatic or shocking event is preserved as if a photographic image was made by using a flashbulb with a camera. ♦ Do you remember where were you and what were you doing when you first heard about the attack on the World Trade Center? ♦ Do you have memories of a major accident, e.g., a car accident? QUESTIONS: • Do flashbulb memories differ in strength from regular memories? How do they change over time? • Do flashbulb memories involve different memory mechanisms from those that create or maintain ordinary memories? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Creates Autobiographical Memories that Lasts a Long Time? 358 What Creates AM’s that Last a Long Time? • Self-generation of associations (connecting a memory to other knowledge) • Distinctiveness • Personal importance causes repeated retrievals of a memory. Consolidation & reconsolidation. • Distributed practice as opposed to massed practice • Strong emotions enhance memory ♦ ♦ Hamann, Ely, Grafton, & Kilts (1999): PET study. Showed subject very pleasant, very unpleasant and neutral pictures. ♦ Emotionally charged pictures produced stronger amygdala response, and better memory. ♦ Cahill, Babinsky, Markowitsch, & McGaugh (1995). Patient with damaged amygdala (B. P.) had normal memory for unemotional narratives, but did not show enhanced memory for emotional parts of a narrative. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Do FBM's Involve a Special Memory Mechanism? 359 Is There A Special Memory Mechanism for Flashbulb Memories (FBMs)? Pro: Special Mechanism • FBMs are consequential – they have high impact on our lives. • FBMs often produce strong emotions. Con: Special Mechanism • Narrative rehearsal hypothesis – we think repeatedly about these events. They are only special because of this rehearsal. • Just because we have vivid memories for FBMs doesn't mean that the memories are accurate. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Are FBM's Accurate? 360 Accuracy of FBM's • Mixed evidence • Neisser & Harsch (1992) Subjects filled out a questionnaire within 1 day of Challenger disaster (1986), and a similar questionnaire 2.5 years later. ♦ Subjects were asked how they learned about the disaster. ♦ Large distortions. • Phantom flashbulbs – subjects often replaced initial memory with another, TV-based memory. ♦ 21% said that they initially learned of event from the TV. After 2.5 years, 45% said that they learned of event from the TV. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Time Course of Memories for 9/11 Attacks 361 Talarico: Time Course of an FBM Talarico, J. M., & Rubin, D. C. (2003). Confidence, not consistency, characterizes flashbulb memories. Psychological Science, 14, 455-461. • Studied memories for the 9/11 attack on WTC. • On 9/12/01, 54 Duke students wrote down their memories of how they first heard of the 9/11 attack. They also wrote down a recent everyday memory, e.g., going to a sporting event. • The study compared 9/11 memories to everyday memories after varying delays. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Graphs Showing Decrease in Accuracy but not Decrease in Certainty for FBM 362 Goldstein Fig. 8.8. Talarico & Rubin (2003) Number of details correctly recalled for everyday & flashbulb memories as a function of days after the event. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Confidence in the accuracy of everyday & flashbulb memories as a function of days after the event. Summary of Results Depicted in these Graphs (Redundant) 363 Talarico Fig 1a Figure 1 from Talarico, J. M., & Rubin, D. C. (2003). Confidence, not consistency, characterizes flashbulb memories. Psychological Science, 14, 455-461. • Number of correct details diminishes over time for both flashbulb and everyday memories. • Belief in the accuracy of memories diminishes over time for everyday memories but remains high for FBM's. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Similar Result for O. J. Simpson Murder Trial 364 Memory for the O. J. Simpson Murder Trial: 15 & 32 Months After the Trial • Subjects were randomly assigned to a 2nd interview 15 or 32 months after the 1st interview. • Subjects were asked to recall what they thought at the 1st interview. 45 40 Percentage of Sample Subjects were interviewed 3 days after the verdict in the O. J. Simpson murder trial. Answered questions about their thoughts on the trial, e.g., how did you learn of the verdict? how do you feel about the verdict? Schmolck, H., Buffalo, E. A., & Squire, L. R. (2000). Memory for distortions develop over time: Recollections of the O. J. Simpson trial verdict after 15 and 32 months. Psychological Science, 11, 39-45. 35 30 25 20 15 10 5 0 15 32 "Don't Remember” Responses 15 32 Very Inaccurate Responses • Over time, there are fewer "don't remember" responses, and more very inaccurate memories (Schmolck et al., 2000). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Why Confidence Remains High While Accuracy Diminishes Over Time 365 Why do people have high confidence in the accuracy of FBM's even though the accuracy declines? • People keep thinking about flashbulb memories. ♦ Increases strength of memory. ♦ Supports the narrative rehearsal hypothesis. • People add information that helps them make sense out of the memory, but the added information may not be accurate. ♦ The added information makes the memory more meaningful. ♦ Memory is constructive or reconstructive. • Source misattribution. ♦ I.e., people learn something after an event but they come to believe that they learned it while experiencing the event. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Return to Question: Is there a Special Mechanism for FBM's? 366 Do Flashbulb Memories (FBM’s) Involve Special Cognitive Mechanisms? Bottom line: No convincing evidence that FBM's involve special mechanisms, although there are ways in which they tend to be unusual. ♦ Encoding is often associated with stronger emotion, more vivid detail, events are more personally important. ♦ It is likely that FBM’s are retrieved multiple times. These retrievals lead to strengthened associations with other facts and ideas. Consolidation and reconstruction of memory over time. ♦ Over time, people have higher confidence in the accuracy of FBM's than everyday memories from the same time period. FBM's appear more vivid and more clear at time of retrieval. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 A Schema for "Office Rooms" 367 Brewer & Treyens (1981) : A Schema for "Office Room" Schemas: Representations of typical characteristics of objects, situations or events. Subject asked to wait in this office room for about 30 seconds prior to start of experiment. Subject does not know that memory will be tested for this room. • Subject is moved to another room. • Recall test – What do you remember about the waiting room? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Predictions & Findings of "Office Room" Experiment 368 Brewer & Treyens (1981): A Schema for "Office Room" Predictions: Memory will be biased .... (a) .... towards recall of schemaconsistent information; (b) .... and against recall of schemainconsistent information Findings: Correct recall: Desk, chairs, shelves Intrusion Errors: Books on shelves Schema consistent Omission Errors: Skull, small doll Schema inconsistent Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Advantages & Disadvantages of Schematic Influences on Memory 369 Schemas and Scripts Influence Memory • Memory can include information not actually experienced but inferred because it is expected and consistent with the schema • "Scripts" are like schemas except that a script is a typical sequence of events or actions. ♦ We have scripts for how to pay for our purchases in a check out line at the market. ♦ We have scripts for how to greet a respected visitor to our home. • Memory is constructive. ♦ The constructive property of memory is generally advantageous, but it can lead to errors or “false memories” Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Roediger/McDermott/Deese Experiment – Same as Coglab 370 False Memory 1 Downloaded with permission from Thomas Pusateri’s website, http://iea.fau.edu/pusateri/home/index.htm, 29 December 2004. ♦ The version of the demonstration shown here slightly modifies the original. Demonstration of the Deese (1959), Roediger & McDermott (1995) false memory paradigm. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Instructions for the Experiment 371 Roediger/McDermott/Deese Paradigm • You will see a list of 19 words, one at a time. • Do whatever you can to remember as many words as you can. • At the end of the list, write down as many of the words as you can recall. • Note to Instructor: The following stimulus slides are self timed (1.8 seconds/slide), so just let them run. You don’t have to advance the slides. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Start of the Stimulus Sequence 372 BED Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 373 CLOCK Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 374 DREAM Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 375 NIGHT Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 376 TURN Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 377 MATTRESS Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 378 SNOOZE Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 379 NOD Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 380 TIRED Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 381 NIGHT Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 382 STOVE Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 383 INSOMNIA Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 384 REST Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 385 TOSS Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 386 NIGHT Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 387 ALARM Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 388 NAP Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 389 SNORE Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 390 PILLOW Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 391 ************************************************ WRITE DOWN THE WORDS YOU SAW ************************************************ Actually you can skip this step, but this is what subjects are asked to do. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Correct List of Words & Types of Erors 392 Here are the stimulus words in the presented order: BED, CLOCK, DREAM, NIGHT, TURN, MATTRESS, SNOOZE, NOD, TIRED, NIGHT, STOVE, INSOMNIA, REST, TOSS, NIGHT, ALARM, NAP, SNORE, PILLOW Types of Memory Errors • Intrusion errors: Words not on the list that you thought were there. o Common intrusion error: Sleep related words like: SLEEP, DROWSY or FATIGUE • Omission errors: Words on the list that you didn't recall. o Common omission error: Non-sleep related word like: STOVE Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Interpretation of Experimental Results 393 Interpretation of Results for the Roediger/McDermott/Deese Paradigm Almost all of the words are sleep-related ("going to sleep" schema). The Roediger/McDermott/Deese paradigm is designed to cause subjects to make two kinds of errors: (a) Schema-consistent intrusion errors. ♦ In the preceding example, the schema was something like "objects or actions that are related to sleeping." ♦ For this example, schema-consistent intrusion errors would be words like: "sleep", "drowsy", "pajamas", etc. (b) Schema-inconsistent omission errors. ♦ The word STOVE was the only non-sleep related word in the list. Subjects are more likely to omit STOVE than other words. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Advantages & Disadvantages of Memory Schemas 394 Advantages & Disadvantages of Constructive Memory Advantages • Allows us to fill in the gaps in our knowledge. ♦ Speeds up how quickly we can interpret or respond to a situation. ♦ Helps create a meaningful narrative about our life experiences. • In general, cognition is inferential. ♦ The schematic nature of memory – similar to Helmholtz’s “unconscious inference”. • Schemas help organize experiences into "chunks." Disadvantages • Sometimes we make errors without realizing it. • Sometimes our memories are based on expectations and not on the actual experience. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Intro to Source Misattribution & Eyewitness Testimony 395 Eyewitness Testimony • Basic source of evidence in the Anglo-American legal system. • Historically more trusted than circumstantial evidence. • Of 248 people who were exonerated through the work of the Innocence Project, 75% were convicted on eyewitness testimony (Quinlivan et al., 2009; Scheck et al., 2000). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Sources of Error in Eyewitness Testimony 396 Sources of Error in Eyewitness Testimony • Intrinsic fallability of memory • Post-event suggestions by interested parties, esp. police. ♦ Misleading post-event information (MPI) can bias memory ♦ Misinformation effect (later in this lecture) • Misleading familiarity • Cross-racial identification • Line ups versus show ups. ♦ Line up: Did one of these men do it? (People tend to respond as if the question is, who in this group looks the most like the person you saw?) ♦ Sequential show up: Did Man A do it? Did Man B do it? etc. (Surprisingly less biased) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Misinformation Effect 397 Source Monitoring & Source Misattribution • Source monitoring - retaining a memory for the source of information in memory. • Source misattribution - attributing a memory to one source when the actual source was something else. ♦ Example: My friends tell me about a large building fire that they witnessed. Years later I believe that I witnessed this fire along with my friends. • Source misattribution can cause errors in eyewitness testimony. ♦ ♦ A familiar face is more likely to be falsely identified as a perpetrator of a crime (witness thinks the familiarity is due to seeing this person commit the crime). Example: Donald Thompson, a memory researcher. While watching Donald Thompson on TV, a woman who was attacked in her home. Later she identified him as the attacker. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Experimental Study of Source Misattribution 398 Source Misattribution is One Cause of Erroneous Eyewitness Memory • A familiar face is more likely to be falsely identified as a perpetrator of a crime (witness thinks the familiarity is due to seeing this person commit the crime). ♦ Example: Donald Thompson, a memory researcher. While watching Donald Thompson on TV, a woman who was attacked in her home. Later she identified him as the attacker. • Remember/Know Distinction: ♦ Feeling of familiarity ≠ Recollection but people may say that they "remember" someone when they feel familiar. • Tomorrow: Continue discussing source monitoring errors and eyewitness memory. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Experimental Study of Source Misattribution 399 Next: Lecture 07-3 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 400 Source Monitoring & Eyewitness Memory Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 05/11/2016: Lecture 07-3 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • Memory is constructive • Eyewitness memory • Source monitoring and source monitoring errors • Errors in eyewitness memory Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Advantages & Disadvantages of Constructive Memory 402 Constructive Memory Advantages Disadvantages • Helps to create a meaningful narrative about our life experiences. • Sometimes our memories are based on expectations and not on the actual experience. • Allows us to fill in the gaps in our knowledge. • Speeds up how quickly we can interpret or respond to a situation. • Schemas help organize experiences into • Sometimes we make errors without "chunks" that are easier to manipulate in realizing it. working memory, and easier to associate with similar experiences. Intro to Eyewitness Testimony Eyewitness Testimony • Basic source of evidence in the Anglo-American legal system. • Historically more trusted than circumstantial evidence. • Of 341 people who were exonerated by DNA evidence as of 2012, eyewitness testimony played a role in 75% of the original convictions. (Quinlivan et al., 2009; Scheck et al., 2000). Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Sources of Error in Eyewitness Testimony 404 Sources of Error in Eyewitness Memory • Intrinsic fallability of memory • Misleading familiarity • Cross-racial identification • Feedback can reinforce memory errors • Line ups versus show ups. ♦ Line up: Did one of these men do it? (People tend to respond as if the question is, who in this group looks the most like the person you saw?) ♦ Sequential show up: Did Man A do it? Did Man B do it? etc. (Surprisingly less biased) • Post-event suggestions by interested parties, esp. police. ♦ Misleading post-event information (MPI) can bias memory ♦ Misinformation effect Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Source Monitoring & Source Misattribution 405 Source Monitoring & Source Misattribution • Source monitoring - retaining a memory for the source of information in memory. • Source misattribution - attributing a memory to one source when the actual source was something else. ♦ Example: My friends tell me about a large building fire that they witnessed. Years later I believe that I witnessed this fire along with my friends. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Source Misattribution & Errors in Eyewitness Memory 406 Source Misattribution is One Cause of Erroneous Eyewitness Memory • Source misattribution can cause errors in eyewitness testimony. ♦ A familiar face is more likely to be falsely identified as a perpetrator of a crime (witness thinks the familiarity is due to seeing this person commit the crime). ♦ Example: A woman was attacked in her home shortly after watching a TV show in which a psychologist, David Thompson, was interviewed. Later she identified David Thompson as the attacker. (He had an alibi, the interview on the TV show.) • Remember/Know Distinction: ♦ Feeling of familiarity ≠ Recollection but people may say that they "remember" Mr. X when Mr. X is familiar. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Ross et al. Experimental Study of Source Misattribution 407 Source Misattribution & Eyewitness Identification See Figure 8.17 in Goldstein Robber Not Present Try to pick robber from photospread; male teacher present Experimental View male teacher reading to students Both Conditions View female teacher getting robbed by a man. Robber Present Control View female teacher reading to students Try to pick robber from photospread; male teacher present Ross, D. F., Ceci, S. J., Dunning, D., & Toglia, M. P. (1994). Unconscious transference and mistaken identity: When a witness misidentifies a familiar but innocent person. Journal of Applied Psychology, 79, 918-930. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Same Slide with Emphasis Rectangles 408 Source Misattribution & Eyewitness Identification See Figure 8.17 in Goldstein Robber Not Present Try to pick robber from photospread; male teacher present Experimental View male teacher reading to students Both Conditions View female teacher getting robbed by a man. Robber Present Control View female teacher reading to students Try to pick robber from photospread; male teacher present Ross, D. F., Ceci, S. J., Dunning, D., & Toglia, M. P. (1994). Unconscious transference and mistaken identity: When a witness misidentifies a familiar but innocent person. Journal of Applied Psychology, 79, 918-930. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results of This Study 409 Results of Ross et al. (1994) Figure 8.20: Ross et. al. (1994) • 60% id male teacher when robber not in photospread. 20% id teacher in control group. ♦ 10% id teacher in control group. • Source misattributions can cause mistaken identifications. 60 % Identification of Male Teacher • 18% id male teacher when robber in photospread. % Identification of Male Teacher ♦ 40 20 0 E C Robber not in photospread 60 40 20 0 E C Robber in photospread E = Experimental Condition = View male teacher at stage 1 C = Control Condition = View female teacher at stage 1 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Misinformation Effect 410 Lineups versus Show-Ups – What Are They? • Classic showup: Police show only one person to a witness. Question: "Is he the man you saw?" • Classic lineup: Police show 7 people to the witness: Question: "Do you see the perpetrator in the line up?" • Improved showup = sequential showup: Police tell the witness, "We're going to show you a series of men (of unstated length). Stop me when you see the perpetrator." • Contrary to most people's expectations, show ups are more accurate than line ups. Why are showups more accurate than lineups? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Why Lineups & Showups Differ as Cognitive Tasks 411 Cognitive Differences Between Lineups and Showups • Classic showup: ♦ Witness asks himself/herself: "Did I see this person do the crime?" • Classic lineup: ♦ Witness assumes that the perpetrator is in the lineup. Mistake! ♦ Witness asks himself/herself: "Which of these men looks the most like the person that I saw?" Mistake! • Sequential presentation = sequential showup (Goldstein refers to this a sequential presentation) ♦ With each person, the witness asks himself/herself: "Am I sure that this is the person who I saw do the crime?" • Lindsey & Wells (1985) found that the sequential showup greatly reduced false id when the perpetrator was not present (43% vs 17%) • Sequential showups slightly reduced the rate of true id when perpetrator is present. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Misinformation Effect 412 Misinformation Effect MPI = Misleading Postevent Information Overview of the Misinformation Effect • Subject sees a video, or a slide sequence, or reads a story. I'll call this "the video." The video usually depicts a crime. • After seeing the video, the subject is asked questions about it. For some subjects, the questions contain misinformation (MPI or false assumptions). • Subjects receive a memory test. A misinformation effect is found if subjects who heard the misleading questions remember the video in a way that is consistent with the question and not the video. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Introduce Loftus & Palmer - Car Crash 413 MPI: Leading Questions Can Produce Memory Biases Loftus & Palmer (1974) • Subjects see film of an auto accident. • Questions contained alternative descriptions of the accident. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results: Effect of the Biased Questions 414 Leading Question Can Produce Memory Biases Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Verb Estimated Speed smashed 40.8 collided 39.3 bumped 38.1 hit 34.0 contacted 31.8 Loftus & Palmer Result for Broken Glass 415 Leading Questions Can Produce False Inferences • One week later, subjects were asked: Did you see any broken glass? Actually, there was no broken glass in the film. Yes No "smashed" 32 68 "hit" 14 86 control* 12 88 * The control group were not asked about the speed of the car (no misinformation; no correct information). UW: Psych 355, Miyamoto, Win '12 Misinformation Effect - Loftus, Miller & Burns 416 Misinformation Effect: Loftus, Miller, & Burns (1978) Subjects watch slides that show a traffic accident: Car A runs a stop sign and hits Car B. • Consistent Info Condition: How fast was Car A going when it went past the stop sign? • Inconsistent Info Condition: How fast was Car A going when it went past the yield sign? • Memory test: Did Car A go past a stop sign or a yield sign? Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results of Loftus, Miller & Burns Experiment 417 % Correct Identification of the Stop Sign 60 Consistent Info 40 Neutral Info Inconsistent Info Misinformation Effect 0 20 Percent Correct 80 100 Results of Loftus, Miller & Burns (1978) 0 20 1 min. day 2 days 1 week Retention Interval • A misinformation effect was found (it gets larger over time) Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Chan: Recalling an Event Increases Susceptibility to Misinformation 418 Recalling an Event Increases Susceptibility to Misinformation Effects Chan, J. C. K., Thomas, A. K., & Bulevich, J. B. (2009). Recalling a witnessed event increases eyewitness suggestibility. Psychological Science, 20, 66–73. • Subjects view tape of "24" TV program. • Misinformation: A terrorist knocks out flight attendant with an injection of a drug, but the misinformation assumes that a chloroform pad was used. • Cued recall test increases tendency to recall misinformation. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Feedback Can Increase Confidence in Erroneous Memories 419 Feedback Can Increase Confidence in Erroneous Memories • Subjects viewed video of crime. • Subjects shown a photo array that did not contain the perpetrator of the crime. • All subjects picked someone from the photo array. (!!!) • Confirming Feedback Condition: "Good, you identified the suspect." • No Feedback Condition • Disconfirming Feedback Condition: "Actually the suspect was number __." • Later when asked how confident they were in their identifications, subjects were most confident with confirming feedback. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 APA Recommendations for Use of Eyewitness Memory in Courts 420 Recommendations for Improving Eyewitness Memory • Use a sequential showup (Goldstein would call it a sequential presentation). • In a showup, use non-suspects who are similar to a suspect. • Inform witness that the perpetrator may not be in a showup. • Administrator of showup should not know who is the suspect. • Get confidence rating immediately after the initial identification. Avoid giving feedback to the witness after the lineup • Use cognitive interview techniques; do not prompt the witness with leading questions. ♦ See Wikipedia article on cognitive interview techniques: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cognitive_interview Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Memory Accuracy & Memory Errors - END 421 Memory Accuracy & Memory Errors • Psychologists are not claiming that memories are mostly errors. • We need to be aware that errors do occur, especially in situations where beliefs about memory accuracy have great practical importance. • In general, people are overconfident in the accuracy of their memories. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 END - or Continue to Outline of Recovered Memories Topic 422 Wednesday, May 11, 2016: The Lecture Ended Here Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 423 Next: Lecture 07-4 Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 424 1. Unlearning a phobia by retrieval + drug 2. Recovered memories Psychology 355: Cognitive Psychology Instructor: John Miyamoto 05/12/2016: Lecture 07-4 Note: This Powerpoint presentation may contain macros that I wrote to help me create the slides. The macros aren’t needed to view the slides. You can disable or delete the macros without any change to the presentation. Outline • Video from the 2016 PBS program, Nova. Episode: "Memory Hackers". Video has excellent examples of: ♦ Use of Nader's fear deconditioning method to treat spider phobia. ♦ Implanting a false memory in an unsuspecting person. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr ‘16 Nader/Brunet Method for Deconditioning a Chronic Fear Response 426 Nader/Brunet Method for Deconditioning a Chronic Fear Response • Patient encounters a memory cue for a memory M that produces a problematic fear response. ♦ E.g., listening to a taped description of the patient's traumatic experience. • After retrieving the fear response, the patient receives propranolol, a drug that blocks the fear response. • Later the fear response is no longer associated with the memory M to which it was previously linked. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Proposed Explanation: The propranolol prevents the patient from reconsolidating the association between the memory M and the fear response. Therefore this association is lost; future retrievals of the memory will not trigger the emotional response. Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 URL for the Nova Video, the "Memory Hackers" 427 PBS NOVA- MEMORY HACKERS, 2016 • <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xS_OiKvoqbo> • Deconditioning spider phobia: 30:00 to 36:40. Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Retrieval and Reconsolidation 428 Retrieval and Reconsolidation 1. Memories are malleable at time of retrieval. Abbreviated MMTR 2. Retrievals an be cued by an external stimulus, e.g., a spider, but also by internal thoughts, e.g., worrying over a personal problem or trying to understand a science problem. 3. MMTR can be manipulated to the benefit of a patient. ○ E.g., deconditioning a phobia. 4. Malleability of memories affects our memories of personal events if we continue to think about them. 5. Malleability of memories affects our understanding of scientific domains if we build that understanding by following chains of inference that depend on many retrievals. Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 What Are Recovered Memories? 429 What Are Recovered Memories? • Definition: A recovered memory is a memory that has two characteristics: ♦ The experiences that are remembered are shocking or traumatic. ♦ There was an extended period in the individual's life when he or she did not remember the experiences that are eventually "recovered." abuse no memory recovered memory Now Time Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Theory of Recovered Memory Has Important Consequences 430 Theory of Recovered Memory Has Important Consequences • Claims of recovered memories have huge consequences for: ... the person who experiences the recovered memory; and ... persons accused of abuse based on recovered memories. ○ Consequences are social, psychological, and legal. • If certain kinds of psychological therapy can produce false recovered memories, then, as psychologists, we are obligated to learn about this and prevent it. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Example of a False Recovered Memory of Sexual Abuse 431 Sometimes Recovered Memories Are Not True Memories • B. R. (Missouri, 1992) remembered under therapy that her father, a clergyman, had repeatedly raped her between ages of 7 – 14 (with her mother's help). She remembered being pregnant twice, each pregnancy ending in an abortion. • Father had to resign his post as clergyman. • Later, medical examination showed that she has never been pregnant and was in fact still a virgin at age 22. • The therapist who guided the "recovery" of these memories was sued by B. R. and settled for $1 million in 1996. • Conclusion: It is not true that recovered memories are always true memories. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Example of Verified Forgetting of Early Trauma 432 Some Traumas Can Be Forgotten • Williams (1994) interviewed 129 women who had been treated 17 years earlier at a sexual abuse clinic. ♦ 38% had no memory of the incident for which they had been admitted. ♦ 12% had no memory of any sexual abuse at any time. (12% % with No Recall of Incident that Brought Them to Clinic 15 women) • Conclusion: It is probably not true that recovered memories are always false memories. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Loftus & Pickrell (1995): Imagining Can Produce False Memories 433 Imagining Can Produce False Memories Loftus, E.F. & Pickrell, J.E. (1995). The formation of false memories. Psychiatric Annals, 25, 720-725. • Subjects recruited in pairs: UW student + parent or sibling. • Working with parent or sibling, the experimenters prepare a booklet containing 3 true events and 1 plausible fabricated event. ♦ E.g., fabricated event = subject got lost in a shopping mall, crying, aid and comfort by an elderly woman and, finally, reunion with the family. • Procedure: ♦ Subject reads the description of each event. ♦ Subject asked to remember the event. ♦ Subject writes "I do not remember this" if they do not recall the event. ♦ Subjects are repeatedly encouraged to "remember" the fabricated event. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Results of Loftus & Pickrell 434 Result for Loftus & Pickrell (1995) • About 25% of subjects “remember” the fabricated event after 2 sessions of trying to recall the event. • Conclusion: It is possible to convince people that fabricated childhood events did occur. ♦ Notice analogy to therapist attempting to "recover" memories of childhood abuse. ♦ Note that the anti-recovered memory advocates do not claim that everyone can be made to believe in false memories. They only want to show that this can sometimes occur. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 PBS Nova, the "Memory Hackers" - Inducing a False Memory 435 PBS NOVA- MEMORY HACKERS, 2016 • <https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xS_OiKvoqbo> • 38:40 - 42:30: Demonstration that false memory can be implanted. ○ ○ Young woman is gradually convinced that at age 14 she got into a dispute with someone in a public place, and she was arrested by the police [not true]. Method is based on suggestion and retrievals of related memories (building up the parts of the memory) Psych 355,, Miyamoto, Spr '16 436 What Is the Recipe for Creating a False Autobiographical Memory? • Repeatedly retrieve a specific memory M. ♦ If the subject does not remember anything like M, then start by remembering common details that will be part of the memory of M. • At each retrieval, encourage the subject to modify the memory in some way, i.e., ask leading questions or suggest abusive possibilities may have occurred. • Encourage the subject to imagine the context of the abuse and the occurrence of abuse. • Provide positive feedback whenever the subject makes a statement that suggests that abuse has occurred. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 Are There Verifiable Examples of Recovered Memories? 437 Conclusions Regarding Recovered Memories • There is reason to believe that recovery of true traumatic memories has sometimes occurred. • There is evidence that false memories can be created. • There is evidence that some therapists have unintentionally “helped” patients create false memories of traumatic events. • The method for creating a false memory M involves repeatedly imagining aspects or components of M; retrieving previous imaginings of M; gradually modifying beliefs that are linked to M. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 APA Recommendations re Recovered Memories of Sexual Abuse - END 438 APA Panel Recommendations APA = American Psychological Association • The controversy over adult recollections should not obscure the fact that child sexual abuse is a complex and pervasive problem. • Most people who were sexually abused as children remember all or part of what happened to them. • It is possible for memories of abuse that have been forgotten for a long time to be remembered. • It is possible to construct convincing pseudomemories (false memories) for events that never occurred. Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '16 END 439 End of Lectures: 04-1 to 07-4 + Section Slides Psych 355, Miyamoto, Spr '15 440