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Fact or Falsehood? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. – False The day after you are introduced to a number of new students, you will more easily recall the names of those you met first. – True Memory aids (e.g., those that use imagery and devices for organization) are no more useful than simple rehearsal if information. – False Only a few people have any type of photographic memory. – False Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still limited in the number of permanent memories we can form. – False We store information in memory as libraries store their books, that is, in discrete, precise locations. – False When people learn something while intoxicated, they recall it best when they are again intoxicated. – True The hour before sleep is a good time to commit information to memory. – True Repeatedly imagining a nonexistent even can lead us to believe it actually happened. – True Children typically will repress any memory of having seen one of their parents being murdered. – False Name the 7 Dwarfs Grouchy, Gabby, Fearful, Sleepy, Smiley, Jumpy, Hopeful, Shy, Droopy, Dopey, Sniffy, Wishful, Puffy, Dumpy, Sneezy, Lazy, Pop, Grumpy, Bashful, Cheerful, Teach, Shorty, Nifty, Happy, Doc, Wheezy, Stubby Sleepy, Dopey, Grumpy, Sneezy, Happy, Doc, Bashful How many can you remember? Make up a story. How many can you remember this time? The woman who could not forget The man who could not remember MEMORY AND THINKING Chapter 7 MEMORY AND HOW IT WORKS Memory: Learning that has persisted over time To remember an event, we must successfully – Encode – get information into our brain – Storage – retain information – Retrieval – getting information back out HOW WE ENCODE Parallel processing – doing many things at once We automatically process information about space, time, frequency and well-learned information Effortful processing – encoding that requires attention and conscious effort – Can be boosted through rehearsal – conscious repetition – Overlearning increases retention HOW WE ENCODE -CONT Spacing effect – we retain information better when our rehearsal is distributed over time – Spaced study and self-assessment beat cramming Serial position effect – tendency to recall best the last and first items in a list – Primacy effect – best recall for first items – Recency effect – best recall for last items PRESIDENTS 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. Washington 1912. J. Adams 15 13. Jefferson 13 14. Madison 4 15. Monroe 2 16. J. Q. Adams 6 17. Jackson 5 18. Van Buren 1 19. Harrison 3 20. Tyler 2 21. Polk 5 22. Taylor 3 23. Fillmore 1 24. Pierce 0 25. Buchanan 1 26. Lincoln 19 27. A. Johnson 328. 29. Grant 2 30. Hayes 1 31. Garfield 2 32. Arthur 0 Cleveland 3 33. Harrison 0 Cleveland McKinley 1 40. Eisenhower 6 Kennedy 18 Johnson 3 Nixon 8 Ford 9 Carter 8 Reagan 9 41. G. H.W. Bush 17 42. Clinton 17 G.W. Bush 18 Obama 19 34. 35. 36. T. Roosevelt 1137. Taft 6 Wilson 4 Harding 1 Coolidge 1 Hoover 8 38. 39. F.D. Roosevelt 13 43. Truman 8 44. SERIAL POSITION EFFECT Percentage of words recalled 90 80 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 WHAT WE ENCODE Visual encoding – encoding of images – Mnemonics – memory aids that use vivid imagery and organizational devices Acoustic encoding – encoding of sounds Semantic encoding – encoding of meaning, including meaning of words Fed Ex Mnemonic Commercial EXAMPLE A newspaper is better than a magazine. A seashore is a better place than the street. At first it is better to run than to walk. You may have to try several times. It takes some skill but is easy to learn. Even young children can enjoy it. Once successful, complications are minimal. Rain, however, soaks in very fast. Too many people doing the same thing can also cause problems. One needs lots of room. LEVELS OF PROCESSING Memorize as many digits as you can (in order) 2169646151997252 46801296160894 chunking - organizing items into familiar, manageable units Memory Olympics SHORT TERM VS. LONG TERM MEMORY Short-Term Memory – Limited, unless actively processed – Capacity of 7 digits +/- 2 – Better for random numbers than random letters – Better for sound than sight Long-Term Memory – Limitless STORING MEMORIES Flashbulb memories – clear memory of an emotionally significant moment or event – Strong emotional experiences = strong, reliable memories Amnesia victims – Have implicit memory – how to do something – But no explicit memory – memory of facts and experiences that one can consciously know and “declare” SHORT-TERM MEMORY DECAY Percentage who recalled consonants 90 80 70 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 3 6 9 12 15 18 Time in seconds between presentation of contestants and recall request (no rehearsal allowed) RETRIEVAL: GETTING INFORMATION OUT Priming - often unconscious activation of particular associations in memory – “memoryless memory” Context effects – Easier to remember things in the same context you learned them – Déjà vu - sense that “I’ve experienced this before” – Mood congruent memory - tendency to recall experiences that are consistent w/one’s current good or bad mood EFFECTS OF CONTEXT ON MEMORY Percentage of words recalled 40 30 20 10 0 Water/ Land/ land water Different contexts for hearing and recall Water/ Land/ water land Same contexts for hearing and recall WHY WE FORGET Three sins of forgetting – Absent-mindedness - inattention to details – Transience - storage decay over time – Blocking - inaccessibility of stored info Three sins of distortion – Misattribution - confusing the source of the information – Suggestibility - lingering effects of misinformation – Bias - belief-colored recollections One sin of intrusion – Persistence - unwanted memories FORGETTING Course of forgetting is initially rapid, but levels off w/time Interference – Proactive interference - something you learned earlier disrupts your recall of something you experience later – Retroactive interference - new information makes it harder to recall something you learned earlier Freud believed we repress - banish anxiety arousing thoughts, feelings and memories WHICH PENNY IS THE REAL THING? Which penny is the real thing? EBBINGHAUS’ FORGETTING CURVE Percentage of list retained when relearning 60 50 40 30 20 10 0 12345 10 15 20 Time in days since learning list 25 30 PROACTIVE AND RETROACTIVE INTERFERENCE FAULTY MEMORY CONSTRUCTION Misinformation effect - incorporating misleading information into one’s memory of an event Source amnesia - attributing the wrong source to an event we have experienced, heard about, read about or imagined False memories feel as real as true memories Unreliable memories – Things happening before age 3 – Memories “recovered” under hypnosis or drugs MEMORY CONSTRUCTION Depiction of actual accident Memory Construction Leading question: “About how fast were the cars going when they smashed into each other?” IMPROVING MEMORY Study repeatedly Make the material meaningful Activate retrieval cues Use mnemonic devices Minimize interference Sleep more Test your own knowledge EYEWITNESS TESTIMONY http://www.psychology.iastate.edu/facult y/gwells/theeyewitnesstest.html