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AP Psychology Midterm Review Unit VII, Cognition: Modules 31-36 Module 31: Studying and Building Memories ● Memory: the persistence of learning over time through the encoding, storage, and retrieval of information ● Information - Processing Models: analogies that compare human memory to a computer’s operations 1. Encoding: processing information into the memory system 2. Storage: retaining encoded information over time 3. Retrieval: getting information out of memory storage ● The information-processing model has limits because the dual-track brain processes many things simultaneously through parallel processing: the processing of many aspects simultaneously ● Connectionism: memories are products of interconnected neural networks ● Richard Atkinson and Richard Shiffrin’s model: 1. Sensory memory: immediate, very brief recording of sensory information in the memory system 2. Short-term memory: activated memory that holds a few items briefly before the information is either stored or forgotten 3. Long-term memory: permanent and limitless memory system, including knowledge, skills and experiences. ● Working memory: an understanding of short-term memory that focuses on conscious, active processing of incoming auditory and visual information. ● Some information will go straight to the long-term memory (ex. Classical conditioning) ● Two types of Memories: 1. Explicit Memories: memory of facts and experiences that one can consciously know; uses effortful processing: encoding requiring conscious effort 2. Implicit Memories: retention independent of conscious recollection; uses automatic processing: unconscious encoding of incidental information, such as space, time and frequency. ● George Sperling demonstrated iconic memory, a momentary sensory memory of visual stimuli, or echoic memory, a momentary sensory memory of auditory stimuli. ● George Miller showed that the short-term memory can retain ~7 pieces of information. ● Effortful Processing Strategies ○ Chunking: organizing items into familiar, manageable units ○ Mnemonics: memory aids, especially those that use vivid imagery and organizational devices ● ○ Peg-word system: visual-imagery skill to create a song/jingle ○ Hierarchies: broad concepts are divided into narrower concepts and facts Spacing Effect: the tendency for distributed study to yield better long-term retention than is achieved through massed study / practice. ● Testing Effect: enhanced memory after retrieving rather than rereading info. ● Self-Reference Effect: people have good recall for information meaningfully related to themselves. ● Levels of Processing ○ Shallow Processing: encoding on a basic level based on the structure or appearance of words ○ ● Deep Processing: encoding semantically, based on the meaning of words If information is not meaningful, people have trouble processing it. Module 32: Memory Storage and Retrieval ● The capacity for storing long-term memories is essentially limitless. ● Memories do not reside in single, specific spots. Instead, different memories reside in different areas of the brain. ● Explicit - Memory System ○ Memory requires brain networks to process and store explicit memories in the frontal lobes and the hippocampus. Includes facts and personal experiences. ○ Hippocampus: saves and processes information for storage ■ Brain scans and autopsies indicate that new explicit memories are laid down via the hippocampus. ○ Memories are not permanently stored in the hippocampus. It holds the elements of the remembered scenario, including sound, location, etc. ○ Sleep supports memory consolidation, as the hippocampus and the brain cortex display simultaneous activity rhythms during sleep. ○ Frontal Lobes: many brain regions send input here for working memory processing. Left frontal lobe processes logics, and the right, visual designs. ● Implicit - Memory System ○ Implicit memories are for skills and conditioned associations. Includes motor and cognitive skills and classical and operant conditioning. ○ Cerebellum: forms and stores the implicit memories created by classical conditions. ○ Basal Ganglia: deep brain structures involved in motor movement. It facilitates formation of the procedural memories for skills. ○ Infant Amnesia: the conscious memory of the first three years of a child’s life is blank. ■ ● Hippocampus is one of the last brain structures to mature Emotions enhance memory to remember events for survival purposes. ○ It triggers stress hormones and makes more glucose energy available to fuel brain activity, signaling to the brain that something important has happened. ○ Stress provokes the amygdala to initiate a memory trace in the frontal lobes and basal ganglia in order to boost activity in the brain. ○ Significantly stressful events can form indelible memories, which disrupts the ability to process normal memories of the same day. ● Flashbulb memory: a clear memory of an emotionally significant moment (9/11) ● Long-Term Potentiation (LTP): an increase in a cell’s firing potential after brief, rapid stimulation. ○ LTP creates a current that keeps old memories but wipes very recent memories (ex. concussions). ● Three measures of retention: 1. Recall: a measure of memory in which one must retrieve information learned earlier (ex. Fill-in-the-blank test) 2. Recognition: a measure of memory in which one needs to identify items that were previously learned (ex. Multiple choice test) 3. Relearning: a measure of memory that assesses the amount of time saved when one must learn material again. ● Hermann Ebbinghaus showed that the more frequently something is repeated on day one, the fewer repetitions are needed to relearn the information on day two. ● Retrieval cues come from associations, such as smell, taste, sight, people, etc. ○ Priming: the activation, often unconsciously, of particular associations in memory. ○ Context-Dependent Memory: putting oneself back in the same context can help one remember what happened before in the same context. ○ State-Dependent Memory: what one learns in one state may be more easily recalled when in the same state. ■ Mood Congruent: the tendency to recall experiences that are consistent with one’s current good or bad mood. ○ Serial Position Effect: Our tendency to recall the first (primacy effect) and the last (recency effect) items in a list. Module 33: Forgetting, Memory Construction, and Memory Improvement ● Forgetting ○ We discard useless or out-of-date information. ○ After Henry Molaison had brain surgery, he was unable to form new conscious memories, but kept his old memories. ○ Anterograde amnesia: an inability to form new memories ○ Retrograde amnesia: an inability to retrieve information from one’s past ○ Tasks that can be learned with anterograde amnesia include nonverbal tasks or other classically conditioned tasks. ○ What we fail to encode, we will never remember. ○ Hermann Ebbinghaus demonstrated that the course of forgetting is initially rapid, but it will level off with time. ○ Given retrieval cues, one can retrieve elusive memories. However, there is retrieval failure. ■ Proactive Interference: the disruptive effect of prior learning on the recall of new information ■ Retroactive Interference: the disruptive effect of new learning on the recall of old information ■ Positive Transfer: previous learned information often facilitates learning of new information (“good” interference) ■ Because memory is an unreliable, self-serving historian, our memories are extremely malleable. ■ Repression: the basic defense mechanism that banishes from consciousness anxiety-arousing thoughts, feelings and memories. ● Memory Construction Errors: we infer our past from stored information plus what we later imagined, expected, saw, or heard. ○ Misinformation Effect: incorporating misleading information into one’s memory of an event. ○ Source Amnesia: attributing to the wrong source an event we have experienced, heard about, read about, or imagined. ○ Deja Vu: cues from the current situation unconsciously trigger retrieval of an earlier experience. ○ Children’s memories are the most easily molded, especially when asking leading questions. The questions need neutral words. ● Strategies to Improve Memory ○ SQ3R: Survey, Question, Read-Retrieve-Review ○ Rehearse repeatedly ○ Make the material meaningful ○ Activate retrieval cues and mnemonic devices ○ Minimize interference ○ Sleep more Module 34: Thinking Concepts and Creativity ● Cognition: all the mental activities associated with thinking, knowing, remembering and communicating ● Concept: a mental grouping of similar objects, event, ideas, or people ○ Prototype: a mental image that is the best example of a category ○ While concepts and prototypes speed thinking, they can lead to misremembered information ● Creativity: the ability to produce ideas that are both novel and valuable ○ Five Parts ■ Expertise (well-developed base of knowledge to draw from) ■ Imaginative thinking skills ■ Venturesome Personality (seeks new experiences, intrepid) ■ Intrinsic Motivation ■ Creative Environment (spark, support, challenge, and refine ideas) ○ Convergent Thinking: narrows the available problem solutions to determine the single best solution ○ Divergent Thinking: expands the available problem solutions; creative thinking that goes off in different directions Module 35: Solving Problems and Making Decisions ● Algorithm: methodical, logical rule/procedure that guarantees solving a particular problem ○ ● Guaranteed to produce an answer, but can be ridiculously tedious Heuristic: a simple thinking strategy that often allows us to make judgements and solve problems efficiently ○ Often much quicker than algorithms, but also much more prone to error ■ Availability Heuristic: judging the likelihood of things (especially events) based on their availability in memory ● ■ Instances that come readily to mind may seem more common Representative Heuristic: judging the likelihood of things in terms of how well they seem to represent/match particular prototypes ● May lead us to ignore relevant information ● Insight: a sudden realization of a problem’s solution; contrasts with strategy-based solutions ● Mental Set: a tendency to approach a problem in one particular way, often a way that has been successful in the past ● Confirmation Bias: a tendency to search for information that supports our preconceptions and to ignore or distort contradictory evidence ● Overconfidence: the tendency to be more confident than correct ● Belief Perseverance: clinging to one’s initial conceptions after the basis on which they were formed has been discredited ● Framing: the way an issue is posed significantly affects related decisions and judgements ● Intuition: an effortless, immediate, automatic feeling or thought, as contrasted with explicit, conscious reasoning ○ Unconscious processing, thinking about a decision without realizing you are thinking about it; extremely helpful in evaluating evidence, making plans, and listening to “creative whispers” ○ Adapts with experiences; growth of implicit knowledge ○ Can be dangerous if one “under-thinks” and “over-feels” Module 36: Thinking and Language ● Language: our spoken, written, or signed words and the ways we combine them to communicate meaning ○ Phoneme: in language, the smallest distinctive sound unit ○ Morpheme: in language, the smallest unit that carries meaning ; may be a word or part of a word, e.g. prefixes ○ Grammar: in language, a system of rules that enables us to communicate with and understand others ■ Semantics: the set of rules for deriving meaning from sounds ■ Syntax: the set of rules for combining words into grammatically sensible sentences; word order ■ ● Chomsky’s Universal Grammer ● All human languages have nouns, verbs, and adjectives ● All humans are born with predisposition to learn grammar rules Stages of Acquisition ○ Receptive: babies do not speak, but can read lips and recognize different speech sounds by four months ○ Babbling: after four months, babies begin “trying out” random speech sounds ■ ● Babies will transition to imitation after about ten months ○ One-Word: around twelve months, babies can express single-word thoughts ○ Two-Word/Telegraphic: by month 24, babies can express two-word thoughts ○ Language develops rapidly into complete sentences when the child is about two Language Association Areas ○ Broca’s Area: controls language expression (left frontal lobe) ○ Wernicke’s Area: controls language understanding (left temporal lobe) ○ Aphasia: impairment of language, usually caused by left-hemisphere damage either to Broca’s or Wernicke’s area