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* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
• You are now going to take a memory test. • At theIn start of the test youyou will bewill shown Psychology pictures of a group of objects. learn strategies to • Try to memorize them. improve your memory • You will have 20 seconds • When the objects disappear write down all the objects you can remember. • Who has the best memory?……….. 1 Memory •So what is Memory? •Memory is the process of storing and retrieving information about the past. •What would life be like without our memories?.... •How would we …… •Make a cup of tea? •Find our way home? •Know who are friends or enemies were? •Is there anything that we don’t need our memories for? 2 Types of Memory * * * * * Requires conscious thought * Procedural Memory (skills) * Does not require conscious thought 3 Implicit and Explicit Memory • Implicit memory is memory for things not intentionally remembered (without conscious thought) e.g. If you remembered the bee in the last slide – did you intend to? • Explicit memory is when you intend to remember something (which requires conscious thought) e.g. you revise so that you can remember information in the exam. • We may remember through implicit memory far more than we are consciously aware. 4 Procedural (Skills) Memory • Procedural – skills; actions that do not require conscious thought (riding a bicycle?) you don’t have to think about how you pedal or balance. • Procedural memory is much more resistant to forgetting. • Procedural includes implicit memory (that means you may remember something without intentionally learning it or intentionally remembering it e.g. you don’t try to learn to text without looking at your fingers: you learn by practice.) Give some examples of skills that you may have learned via procedural memory…… 5 Declarative Memory:Semantic and Episodic Memory • Declarative things you can declare:– facts, faces, names, events (what did you have for breakfast this morning?) • There are two kinds of Declarative memory: • Episodic Memory= memories of personal experiences or events (e.g. Christmas, birthdays, what I had for breakfast) • Semantic Memory= learned memories; knowledge not linked to time or events (e.g. what is good for me to have at breakfast, capital city of France) • Give some of your own examples of Episodic and Semantic Memory… 6 The Three Processes of Memory (what has to happen in order for a memory to be formed and remembered) Copy processes and underlined part onto your handout. Encoding Taking information / stimulus from environment and programming it into our brains. Stimulus is usually visual (iconic) , but it can be sound (acoustic) and smells etc. It can then be programmed or ‘encoded’ into our brains as iconic, acoustic or semantic encoding Retrieval Recalling by using ‘cues’ to remember items you have stored. People may do this differently. Storage Storing information until it is required at a later time. The length of time the information is stored is the store’s DURATION and how much information can be stored is its CAPACITY 7 2 Activity Who has the best attention? Watch the video clip carefully and count the number of times the white team catches the ball. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A hg6qcgoay4 8 Multi-Store Memory Model By Atkinson & Shiffrin . Environment Rehearsal Coding Coding Sensory Stimuli Sensory Memory Attention Coding If not attended to information is lost Long Term Memory Short Term Memory Loss via displacement or decay if not rehearsed Retrieval 9 DETAIL: Sensory Memory Store: • Temporary storage of information stimulus taken in…. • Visual encoding (iconic) • Auditory encoding (acoustic) • Probably others as well (smell – chemical) – Capacity: Very large – Duration: Very short • about 250 ms. for iconic (visual) • 1-2 sec. for acoustic (sound) 10 Detail: Short Term Memory (STM) • Capacity: Small: 7 plus or minus 2 units or ‘chunks’ (Miller, 1956) Chunk: a meaningful unit Examples: • A group of letters (FBI) • A group of 7 numbers(8346179) are chunked into two groups for even easier recall 941-0657 11 Displacement in STM STM 7 slots ( For 7 units or ‘chunks of information) Cheese Milk Flour Apples Syrup Peas Eggs Bread Bread Milk Flour Apples Syrup Peas Eggs Bread Milk Flour Apples Syrup Peas Bread Milk Flour Apples Syrup Bread Milk Flour Apples Bread Milk Flour Bread Milk Lost from STM Bread 12 This experiment shows that the duration of the STM is around 18 seconds. 13 Primacy-Recency effect 14 Primacy Effect • First items in a list are remembered better than items in the middle 15 Recency Effect • The last items in a list are remembered better than items in the middle, if tested immediately 16 TIME PEAK SLOW PENS LONG AGES THAN VAST HEAT RAIN MORE SOME TUNE RARE WITH BEAR THIS TIES HEAR LIFE Evidence for the PrimacyRecency Effect Remember the following words: 17 TIME PEAK SLOW PENS LONG AGES THAN VAST HEAT RAIN MORE SOME TUNE RARE WITH BEAR THIS TIES HEAR LIFE 73 71 45 71 67 62 45 34 46 48 34 45 41 48 42 67 53 34 45 78 Count how many you recalled: 18 Detail: Long Term Memory (LTM) • Capacity: Potentially Infinite • Duration: A lifetime (decades) • Encoding: Organized by meaning (semantic) • Procedural Memory: habits and motor skills, conditioned or practiced • Declarative Memory: Memory for semantic knowledge (facts) and personal experiences (episodic) 19 Summary of Multi Store Memory Model Components 20 The multi store memory model suggests that forgetting happens because of: • Trace Decay: Memory fades with time if not used– temporary if not rehearsed – otherwise it becomes permanent Peterson and Peterson (1959) (STM & LTM) 21 Displacement: Information in STM is pushed out by newer information. 7+/- 2 ! (STM ONLY) 22 Interference: Memories are disrupted or obscured by other incoming information. Confusion or entanglement of similar memories (STM & LTM) 23 Retrieval Failure: Information/memories in LTM store cannot be accessed because suitable retrieval cues are not available. (LTM ONLY) 24 Diversion of attention: mainly in SM but also affects STM Watkins et al. (1973) 25 Memory in Everyday Life • In this section we will look at factors affecting memory recall (remembering and forgetting) in particular in connection with Eyewitness testimony and Memory improvement methods • When things are forgotten or not remembered it is because: – The memory Is not available (it has ceased to exist) – The memory Is just not accessible (though we might find it given time or the right cues) • Forgetting is fastest right after initial learning • But slower for more meaningful material 26 Cue dependent retrieval failure is when information may be available to recall but is temporarily inaccessible. Evidence – Tip of the tongue phenomenon (Brown & McNeill 1966) The feeling of being on the verge of recalling something, often you can say what letter it starts with, or how many syllables it has. This means that there are Cues that can aid retrieval e.g. • CATEGORY :- We remember things better when we sort information in to different categories (Tulving & Pearlson 1966) • CONTEXT :- (Godden & Baddeley 1975) found external environmental cues present at the time of learning affected our ability to recall information. • STATE :- Internal bodily cues that were experienced at the KARMA time of learning may affect our ability to recall information. SUTRA (Goodwin 1969) Investigated the effects of alcohol. • Stress and Anxiety can also cause retrieval failure. (as stress is a bodily state!) 27 Context dependent memory 28 Godden & Baddeley 1975 29 Performance Stress and Memory Low Moderate High Stress 30 ANXIETY…..THE EFFECT OF EMOTION ON MEMORY 31 Emotional states: Can emotion make us forget? (Repression) Freud said that we repress memories (our ego’s bury them in our unconscious mind), usually to avoid dealing with traumatic experiences; this is referred to as motivated forgetting. This is a protective ego defence mechanism. • • • • • • EVIDENCE Levinger and Clarke found that emotionally charged words were remembered less well than emotionally negative words. (did we find this?) Memories of Child Sex Abuse are occasionally only recovered by psychoanalysis or hypnotherapy. Shell Shock – Soldiers loose their memories of war horrors. Witnesses of violent crimes often remember less detail than would be expected. Major disasters such as 9/11 are less well remembered by the people directly involved, but remembered well by others watching on TV or reading in the news. Loftus & Burns showed participants two videos of a bank robbery – one video was extremely violent the other was not. Participants remembered much more from the nonviolent video. (can you think of another reason for this?) 32 EVALUATION of REPRESSION (is this the whole story?) • Uncomfortable / horrific memories may just not be thought of so much – so are rehearsed less often than normal memories…. So a weaker engram is laid down, which makes the memory trace more likely to fade away. OR • It could be caused by high levels of stress! • Loftus later theorised that the violent video was less well remembered because the participants focused on the weapon used rather than the trivial details of the situation, and that this weapon focus (which diverts attention from other details) is why less 33was remembered in the violent video. Flashbulb memories Can emotion help us remember better? • Brown & Kulik (1977) Coined the phrase Flashbulb memory. It is a type of Episodic Memory that is especially vivid or detailed and relates usually to some major public event (Twin Towers, Princess Diana’s Death).They theorised that an emotional event triggered a neural mechanism in the brain and that the scene was printed on the memory (a strong engram was laid down instantly). • • • • • • EVIDENCE Brown & Kulik questioned participants about famous people’s assassinations – J. F. Kennedy, Martin Luther King. They found that certain things were almost universally remembered about them, these were:Where you were, What you were doing, Who gave you the news What you felt, What others felt, What happened immediately afterwards. Do you have similar memories of Twin Towers 9/11 Further evidence showed that the more personally significant the event the more likely you were to develop a flashbulb memory for it. (75% of black people questioned had a flashbulb memory to Martin Luther King’s death whereas only 33% of white people did!) Can you think of other reasons why things like these are remembered so vividly? 34 EVALUATION • It could be that the vivid memories are simply due to over rehearsal – frequent repetition of event on news / everyone talking about it etc. (so really strong engrams are laid down) • But other research supports Brown and Kulik . Christianson and Hubinette found that emotional involvement does increase the accuracy of memory. When interviewing 110 people who witnessed a bank robbery they found those who had been personally threatened had better memory of the event. This goes against Freud’s theory of repression. 35 Memory Recall The Time Factor • The longer we watch the more likely we are to remember details (more time for rehearsal and elaboration). • The longer the interval between an event and the recall the worse the recall. (Trace decay theory) If the memory is not revisited shortly after the event and often then the memory trace will fade away, however..... 36 Research shows that witnesses beliefs about their own testimony changes over time but their level of accuracy doesn’t! : Confidence Accuracy Time Explain this using memory theories you have learned 37 Other factors influencing the accuracy of Eyewitness testimony: Research shows... • FACES:- Faces are recalled from top down – hair, forehead, are the first things we recall about someone. So people with heads covered or wearing glasses are less well remembered when those items are removed. • CLOTHING:- People tend to focus attention on clothing rather than height or other features • CONTEXT / STATE / FAMILIARITYSTEREOTYPES have an effect on what we expect, and therefore what we remember. • LEADING QUESTIONS:- (LOFTUS 1975) (MISSLED MEMORY) If people are asked questions that lead them in a certain direction they will usually go there. • RACE:- People remember their own race better. • WEAPON FOCUS:- (Loftus) People focus on the weapon / violence rather than the person who is perpetuating it. • SOCIAL INFLUENCE:- People can be influenced by what the other witnesses say. • STRESS/ High emotion:– Repressed memories. Loftus:- People who saw the more violent video remembered less. 38 •10 Improving Memory Strategies for Improving memory Cues Mnemonics & mind maps 39 40 Using cues 41 42 Cues: Organization Experiment •Pear •beagle, •Clarinet •Hail •Rain •Drinks •Rose •Squash •Hand •Boxer •Iron •Coke •Gold •Harp •Piano •Metal •Apple •Body •Fruit •Daffodil •Plum •Nose •Weather •Copper •Labrador •Water •Flowers •Brass •Foot •Tulips •Pansy •Dogs •Sleet •Milk •Orange •Toe •Snow •Flute •Dogs •Labrador •Beagle •Boxer •Spaniel •Fruit •Apple •Pear •Plum •Orange •Weather •Snow •Rain •Sleet •Hail •Flowers •Daffodil •Rose •Pansy •Instrument •Harp •Piano •Flute •Clarinet •Drinks •Water •Milk •Squash •Coke •Body •Nose •Foot •Toe •Hand •Metal •Brass •Gold •Copper 43 List the words you can recall in your booklet now 44 How did you do? •Pear •beagle, •Clarinet •Hail •Rain •Drinks •Rose •Squash •Hand •Boxer •Iron •Coke •Gold •Harp •Piano •Metal •Apple •Body •Fruit •Daffodil •Plum •Nose •Weather •Copper •Labrador •Water •Flowers •Brass •Foot •Tulips •Pansy •Dogs •Sleet •Milk •Orange •Toe •Snow •Flute •Dogs •Labrador •Beagle •Boxer •Spaniel •Fruit •Apple •Pear •Plum •Orange •Weather •Snow •Rain •Sleet •Hail •Flowers •Daffodil •Rose •Pansy •Instrument •Harp •Piano •Flute •Clarinet •Drinks •Water •Milk •Squash •Coke •Body •Nose •Foot •Toe •Hand •Metal •Brass •Gold •Copper 45 Mnemonics Strategies that can increase memory, especially for material that is not easily organized; Mnemonics can be…. tricks, games, or rhymes that help you remember something. By this we can impose an artificial structure on items that would otherwise be hard to remember There are different types of Mnemonic techniques that may suit different materials or learning styles. E.g. visual or verbal 46 Verbal Mnemonics 47 Verbal Mnemonics Rhymes E.g • i before e except after c • 30 days hath September ….. In 1492, Columbus sailed the ocean blue…. •Also good when remembering • the order of something 48 Visual Imagery Mnemonics • Method of Loci –Involves •Good for visual learners! pairing each thing to be remembered with one of an organized set of familiar locations 49 Visual Imagery Mnemonics • Peg-word system - Connecting each thing to be remembered in an interactive image with each item on a standard list using visualization: e.g. • • • • One-bun Two-shoe Three – tree …. Good for shopping lists or lists of any sort.... 50 Visual Imagery Mnemonics •Mind maps •An example of elaborative rehearsal A mind map on how to do a mind map! •Giving each page of revision notes an51 unique, distinctive visual appearance Improving Memory: other methods • Recall Practice: Practicing recalling material rather than just rereading it; especially useful for college material • Spaced Practice: Shorter practice sessions spaced widely apart; more effective than massed practice • Over-learning: Practicing material well beyond the point needed to recall it for the 52 moment 53 54 Now try a strategy yourself!! Use two or more of the techniques you have learned today to help you to remember as much as you can about Memory Improvement Techniques to help you study for your upcoming test. You will need to discuss the strategies you used to study. 55 That’s all folks! 56