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Chapter 8
Memory
Memory
ƒ Memory
ƒ persistence of learning over time
through the storage and
retrieval of information
ƒ Flashbulb Memory
ƒ a clear memory of an
emotionally significant moment
or event
Memory
ƒ Memory as Information Processing
ƒ similar to a computer
ƒ write to file
ƒ save to disk
ƒ read from disk
ƒ Encoding
ƒ the processing of information into the
memory system
ƒ i.e., extracting meaning
Memory
ƒ Storage
ƒ the retention of encoded information
over time
ƒ Retrieval
ƒ process of getting information out of
memory
Memory
ƒ Sensory Memory
ƒ the immediate, initial recording of
sensory information in the memory
system
ƒ Working Memory
ƒ focuses more on the processing of
briefly stored information
Memory
ƒ Short-Term Memory
ƒ activated memory that holds a few
items briefly
ƒ look up a phone number, then quickly
dial before the information is forgotten
ƒ Long-Term Memory
ƒ the relatively permanent and limitless
storehouse of the memory system
A Simplified Memory
Model
Sensory input
Attention to important
or novel information
Encoding
External
events
Sensory
memory
Short-term
memory
Encoding
Long-term
memory
Retrieving
Encoding - Getting
Information In
Encoding
Effortful
Automatic
Encoding
ƒ Automatic Processing
ƒ unconscious encoding of incidental
information
ƒ space
ƒ time
ƒ frequency
ƒ well-learned information
ƒ word meanings
ƒ we can learn automatic processing
ƒ reading backwards
Encoding
ƒ Effortful Processing
ƒ requires attention and conscious
effort
ƒ Rehearsal
ƒ conscious repetition of information
ƒ to maintain it in consciousness
ƒ to encode it for storage
Encoding
ƒ Ebbinghaus used nonsense syllables
ƒ TUV ZOF GEK WAV
ƒ the more times practiced on Day 1,
the fewer repetitions to relearn on
Day 2
ƒ Spacing Effect
ƒ distributed practice yields better longterm retention than massed practice
Encoding
Time in
minutes
taken to
relearn
list on
day 2
20
15
10
5
0
8
16
24
32
42
53
Number of repetitions of list on day 1
64
Encoding - Serial Position
Effect
Percent
age of
words
recalled
90
80
Serial Position
Effect-tendency
to recall best
the last items in
a list
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1
2
3
4 5 6 7 8
Position of
word in list
9
10 11 12
Encoding
ƒ Imagery
ƒ mental pictures
ƒ a powerful aid to effortful processing,
especially when combined with semantic
encoding
ƒ Mnemonics
ƒ memory aids
ƒ especially those techniques that use vivid
imagery and organizational devices
Encoding
ƒ Chunking
ƒ organizing items into familiar, manageable
units
ƒ like horizontal organization--1776149218121941
ƒ often occurs automatically
ƒ use of acronyms
ƒ HOMES--Huron, Ontario, Michigan, Erie, Superior
ƒ ARITHMETIC--A Rat In Tom’s House Might Eat
Tom’s Ice Cream
Encoding - Chunking
ƒ Organized information is more easily recalled
Encoding
ƒ Hierarchies
ƒ complex information broken down into broad concepts and
further subdivided into categories and subcategories
Encoding
(automatic
or effortful)
Meaning
(semantic
Encoding)
Imagery
(visual
Encoding)
Chunks
Organization
Hierarchies
Storage - Retaining
Information
ƒ Iconic Memory
ƒ a momentary sensory memory of visual
stimuli
ƒ a photographic or picture image memory
lasting no more that a few tenths of a
second
ƒ Echoic Memory
ƒ momentary sensory memory of auditory
stimuli
Storage - Short-Term
Memory
Percentage
90
who recalled
consonants 80
70
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
ƒ Short-Term
Memory
3
6
9
12
15
18
Time in seconds between presentation
of contestants and recall request
(no rehearsal allowed)
ƒ limited in
duration and
capacity
ƒ “magical”
number 7+/-2
Storage - Long-Term
Memory
ƒ How does storage work?
ƒ Karl Lashley (1950)
ƒ rats learn maze
ƒ lesion cortex
ƒ test memory
ƒ Synaptic changes
ƒ Long-term Potentiation
ƒ increase in synapse’s firing potential after brief, rapid
stimulation
ƒ Strong emotions make for stronger memories
ƒ some stress hormones boost learning and retention
Storage - Long-Term
Memory
ƒ Amnesia--the loss of memory
ƒ Explicit Memory
ƒ memory of facts and experiences that one can
consciously know and declare
ƒ also called declarative memory
ƒ hippocampus--neural center in limbic system that
helps process explicit memories for storage
ƒ Implicit Memory
ƒ retention independent of conscious recollection
ƒ also called procedural memory
Storage - Long-Term
Memory Subsystems
Storage - Long-Term
Memory
ƒ MRI scan of hippocampus (in red)
Hippocampus
Retrieval - Getting
Information Out
ƒ Recall
ƒ measure of memory in which the
person must retrieve information
learned earlier
ƒ as on a fill-in-the blank test
ƒ Recognition
ƒ Measure of memory in which the
person has only to identify items
previously learned
ƒ as on a multiple-choice test
Retrieval
ƒ Relearning
ƒ memory measure that assesses
the amount of time saved when
learning material a second time
ƒ Priming
ƒ activation, often unconsciously,
of particular associations in
memory
Retrieval Cues
Percentage of
words recalled
40
30
20
10
0
Water/
land
Land/
water
Different contexts for
hearing and recall
Water/
water
Land/
land
Same contexts for
hearing and recall
Retrieval Cues
ƒ Deja Vu (French)--already seen
ƒ cues from the current situation may
subconsciously trigger retrieval of an
earlier similar experience
ƒ "I've experienced this before."
Retrieval Cues
ƒ Mood-congruent Memory
ƒ tendency to recall experiences that are
consistent with one’s current mood
ƒ memory, emotions, or moods serve as
retrieval cues
ƒ State-dependent Memory
ƒ what is learned in one state (while one is
high, drunk, or depressed) can more easily
be remembered when in same state
Forgetting
ƒ Forgetting as encoding failure
ƒ Information never enters long-term
memory
Attention
External
events
Short- Encoding
Sensory
term
memory Encoding
memory
Encoding
failure leads
to forgetting
Longterm
memory
Forgetting
Percentage of
list retained
when
relearning
ƒ Ebbinghaus
forgetting
curve over
30 days-initially
rapid, then
levels off
with time
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
12345
10
15
20
25
Time in days since learning list
30
Forgetting
ƒ The forgetting curve for Spanish learned in school
Percentage of 100%
original
90
vocabulary
80
retained
Retention
drops,
70
then levels off
60
50
40
30
20
10
0
1 3 5
9½
14½
25
35½
49½
Time in years after completion of Spanish course
Retrieval
ƒ Forgetting can result from failure to
retrieve information from long-term
memory
Attention
External
events
Sensory
memory
Encoding
Encoding
Short-term
Long-term
memory
Retrieval memory
Retrieval failure
leads to forgetting
Forgetting as
Interference
ƒ Learning some items may disrupt
retrieval of other information
ƒ Proactive (forward acting) Interference
ƒ disruptive effect of prior learning on recall
of new information
ƒ Retroactive (backwards acting)
Interference
ƒ disruptive effect of new learning on recall of
old information
Forgetting as
Interference
Forgetting
ƒ Retroactive Interference
Percentage 90%
of syllables 80
recalled 70
Without interfering
events, recall is
better
After sleep
60
50
40
30
20
10
After remaining awake
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Hours elapsed after learning syllables
8
Forgetting
ƒ Forgetting can
occur at any
memory stage
ƒ As we process
information,
we filter, alter,
or lose much
of it
ForgettingInterference
ƒ Motivated Forgetting
ƒ people unknowingly revise memories
ƒ Repression
ƒ defense mechanism that banishes from
consciousness anxiety-arousing thoughts,
feelings, and memories
Memory Construction
ƒ We filter information and fill in
missing pieces
ƒ Misinformation Effect
ƒ incorporating misleading information into
one's memory of an event
ƒ Source Amnesia
ƒ attributing to the wrong source an event
that we experienced, heard about, read
about, or imagined (misattribution)
Memory Construction
Depiction of actual accident
ƒ Eyewitnesses
reconstruct
memories when
questioned
Leading question:
“About how fast were the cars
going when they smashed into
each other?”
Memory
construction
Memory Construction
ƒ Most people can agree on the following:
Injustice happens
Incest and sexual abuse happens
Forgetting happens
Recovered memories are commonplace
Memories recovered under hypnosis or drugs
are especially unreliable
ƒ Memories of things happening before age 3
are unreliable
ƒ Memories, whether false or real, are upsetting
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
ƒ
Improve Your Memory
ƒ Study repeatedly to boost recall
ƒ Spend more time rehearsing or
actively thinking about the material
ƒ Make material personally meaningful
ƒ Use mnemonic devices
ƒ associate with peg words--something
already stored
ƒ make up story
ƒ chunk--acronyms
Improve Your Memory
ƒ Activate retrieval cues--mentally
recreate situation and mood
ƒ Recall events while they are fresh-before you encounter misinformation
ƒ Minimize interference
ƒ Test your own knowledge
ƒ rehearse
ƒ determine what you do not yet
know