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Memory: get sensory data, translate/organize it into meaningful form, store it, and retrieve it. • Encoding: step 1… mental operation on data so brain can use or store it • Storage: holding on to data for a specified period of time (20 seconds to ‘from now on’) •Retrieval: getting information out of storage. Models of Memory Systems • Information Processing: 3 stages and data must past through them in the correct order •Parallel Distributed Processing: simultaneous multilevel processing of many aspects of data Levels of Processing Model: some data processed at a deeper level than others (meaning) Let’s go with Info Processing for now. 1. Sensory Memory: iconic and echoic data stored VERY briefly. Capacity varies. 2. Short Term Memory: If sensory memories hit consciousness, bingo. Triesman says filtering can lead to selective attention, and we can screen for relevance STM appear to be stored as sounds rather than images. Errors reflect this. 3 Components: a visual (sketch pad), auditory (recorder), and a central exec coordinator How much can STM hold, and how long will it hold up? • Miller’s research with digits produces the magic number 7 (+ or – 2). • Complex data will drop limits to around 4 • We can expand this by ‘chunking’; organize our data into combinations of groups • Stuff will stay in STM anywhere from 12 to 30 seconds (depending on conditions) • We can extend the storage time using maintenance rehearsal (keep on repeating) • We can lose stuff easily to interference How about Long Term Memory? • • • Practically unlimited storage capacity Relatively permanent storage duration Transfer from STM to LTM works best if we use Elaborative Rehearsal Types of LTM? 1. Procedural Memory: skills, habits or processes I know how to do. Ride a bike 2. And 2 types of Declarative Memory: Semantic memories – stuff I know Episodic memories – info about me/my life How does LTM storage work? • • • • • • Semantic Network Model: related concepts are stored near each other; helps us access many different concepts simultaneously Retrieval: encoding specificity may help Recognition is easiest Recall is tougher Tip of the tongue phenomenon Serial Position effect allows me to remember 1st few items (primacy) and last few items (recency) and forget the middle Anything else I should know? • • • • • • • Automatic encoding allows for storage without any effort or rehearsal Flashbulb memories: often a strong emotional component Memory retrieval (Loftus) is a constructive process (we are retelling/creating a story) Hindsight bias: I knew that was gonna happen Misinformation Effect False memories issue: lowers accuracy. No such thing as age regression. How does forgetting happen? • • • • • • Ebbinghaus’ “curve of forgetting”. Things disappear quickly at first, then slow down Distributed practice (study – break – study) works better than massed practice Sometimes we’ve really got encode failure LTMs decay from disuse. Connections get weak or disappear, but not from aging. Proactive interference: my new phone # ? Retroactive interference: I’d love my new Mac. Now I forgot how my PC worked. Where are memories stored exactly? • • • • • • • STMs stored in the prefrontal cortex and the temporal lobes Procedural memories in a separate system LTMs widely distributed in frontal cortex and temporal lobes (separate from STMs) How does Amnesia Work? Retrograde: often associated with injury Anterograde: associated with dementia Consolidation Interruption? Hippocampus essential for storing new memories. Infantile Amnesia. A developmental issue?