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Memory 1 Goals • • • • • Overview (26) Encoding (27) Storage (28) Retrieval (29) Forgetting (30) 2 Memory Memory is the basis for knowing your friends, your neighbors, the English language, the national anthem, and yourself. If memory was nonexistent, everyone would be a stranger to you; every language foreign; every task new; and even you yourself would be a stranger. 3 Definition Memory is learning that has persisted over time. It is our ability to store and retrieve information. 4 Which one is the real penny? A B C D E 1 2 3 5 Impact of Lack of Memory • Clive Wearing (0:10-7:00) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WmzU47i2xgw&feature=related Damage to the temporal cortex (herpes simplex encephalitus) Antereograde Amnesia Some functions spared. Why? 6 Information Processing Models of Memory (Simple) Keyboard (Encoding) Disk (Storage) Sequential Process Monitor (Retrieval) 7 Information Processing Model (Moderate) 1929- • Atkinson-Schiffrin Model (1968) Duration Size Sensory Memory <1 second Infinite? Short-Term Memory 1/2 minute ≈7 Long-Term Memory 1 lifetime Large 1943- 8 Modifications to the Three-Stage Model 1. Some information skips the first two stages and enters long-term memory automatically. 2. Since we cannot focus on all the sensory information received, we select information that is important to us and actively process it into our working memory. 9 Information Processing (Complex) 10 Part II: Encoding: Getting Information In How We Encode What We Encode Encoding: Getting Information In How We Encode 1. Some information (route to your school) is automatically processed. 2. However, new or unusual information (friend’s new cell-phone number) requires attention and effort. Automatic Processing We process an enormous amount of information effortlessly, such as the following: 1. Space: While reading a textbook, you automatically encode the place of a picture on a page. 2. Time: We unintentionally note the events that take place in a day. 3. Autobiographical: You effortlessly keep track of things that happen to you. Effortful Processing Committing novel information to memory requires effort just like learning a concept from a textbook. Such processing leads to durable and accessible memories. Rehearsal Effortful learning usually requires rehearsal or conscious repetition. Ebbinghaus studied rehearsal by using nonsense syllables: TUV YOF GEK XOZ Hermann Ebbinghaus (1850-1909) Rehearsal The more times the nonsense syllables were practiced on Day 1, the fewer repetitions were required to remember them on Day 2. Encoding Effects 1. Spacing Effect: We retain information better when we rehearse over time. 2. Serial Position Effect: When your recall is better for first and last items on a list, but poor for middle items. What We Encode 1. Encoding by meaning 2. Encoding by images 3. Encoding by organization Encoding Meaning Processing the meaning of verbal information by associating it with what we already know or imagine. Encoding meaning (semantic encoding) results in better recognition later than visual or acoustic encoding. Visual Encoding Mental pictures (imagery) are a powerful aid to effortful processing, especially when combined with semantic encoding. Showing adverse effects of tanning and smoking in a picture may be more powerful than simply talking about it. Mnemonics Imagery is at the heart of many memory aids. Mnemonic techniques use vivid imagery and organizational devices in aiding memory. Organizing Information for Encoding Break down complex information into broad concepts and further subdivide them into categories and subcategories. 1. Hierarchies 2. Chunking Hierarchy Complex information broken down into broad concepts and further subdivided into categories and subcategories. Chunking I Organizing items into a familiar, manageable unit. Try to remember the numbers below. 1-7-7-6-1-4-9-2-1-8-1-2-1-9-4-1 If you are well versed with American history, chunk the numbers together and see if you can recall them better. 1776 1492 1812 1941. Chunking II Acronyms are another way of chunking information to remember it. King Phillup Came Over From Germany Singing: K P C O G S Oh, Oh, Oh, To Touch And Feel Very Good' Velvet Aah Hah: O O O TTAF V G V S H Encoding Summarized in a Hierarchy Part III: Storage: Retaining Information Sensory Memory Working (Short-Term) Memory Long-Term Memory Storing Memories in the Brain Storage: Retaining Information Storage is at the heart of memory. Three stores of memory are shown below: Sensory Memory Working Memory Long-term Memory Encoding Events Encoding Retrieval Retrieval Sensory Memory Sensory Memory Working Memory Long-term Memory Encoding Events Encoding Retrieval Retrieval Whole Report R G T F M Q L Z S “Recall” RTMZ (44% recall) 50 ms The exposure time for the stimulus is so small that items cannot be rehearsed. Sperling (1960) Psychological Monographs, 74 (498), 336. Partial Report S X T J R S P K Y Low Tone Medium Tone High Tone “Recall” JRS (100% recall) 50 ms Sperling (1960) argued that sensory memory capacity was larger than what was originally thought. Time Delay A D I N L V O G H 50 ms Low Tone Time Delay “Recall” Medium Tone N__ (33% recall) High Tone Sensory Memory Percent Recognized The longer the delay, the greater the memory loss. 80 60 40 20 0.15 0.30 0.50 Time (Seconds) 1.00 Sensory Memories The duration of sensory memory varies for the different senses. Iconic 0.5 sec. long Echoic 3-4 sec. long Hepatic < 1 sec. long Working Memory Sensory Memory Working Memory Long-term Memory Encoding Events Encoding Retrieval Retrieval Projector Off!! Mini-Experiment Size Stimuli 3 PXR 4 H G PA 5 ZCMIL 6 KHKSDE 7 VU JAZ IW 8 GOKYRXDN 9 10 11 S K JE Z FXYT UNKMIHCQPF RU JAZ IWTKD C 36 Working Memory Capacity My problem is that I have been persecuted by an integer. For seven years this number has followed me around, has intruded in my most private data, and has assaulted me from the pages of our most public journals. This number assumes a variety of disguises, being sometimes a little larger and sometimes a little smaller than usual, but never changing so much as to be unrecognizable. The persistence with which this number plagues me is far more than a random accident. There is, to quote a famous senator, a design behind it, some pattern governing its appearances. Either there really is something unusual about the number or else I am suffering from delusions of persecution. • Address to the Eastern Psychological Association, April 15, 1955 by George A Miller & published in Psychological Review, 101, 343-352. 37 Working Memory Capacity The Magical Number Seven, Plus or Minus Two: Some Limits on Our Capacity for Processing Information (1956). Ready? MUTGIKTLRSYP You should be able to recall 7±2 letters. George A. Miller 1920 http://www.psych.utoronto.ca/users/peterson/psy430s2001/Miller%20GA%20Magical%20Seven%20Psych%20Review%201955.pdf Chunking The capacity of the working memory may be increased by “chunking.” F-B-I-T-W-A-C-I-A-I-B-M FBI TWA CIA IBM 4 chunks Duration Peterson and Peterson (1959) measured the duration of working memory by manipulating rehearsal. CHJ MKT HIJ 547 547 544 541 … CH?? The duration of the working memory is about 20 sec. Working Memory Duration Peterson & Peterson (1959). Journal of Experimental Psychology, 58, 193-198. Long-Term Memory Sensory Memory Working Memory Long-term Memory Encoding Events Encoding Retrieval Retrieval Memory Feats!! • • • • Digits of 𝜋: 67,890 Spoken #s (1 per 2 sec): 400 1 Pack of Cards: 21.2 sec Playing cards in 10 min: 364 http://www.recordholders.org/en/list/memory.html#pi Summary: Memory Stores Feature Sensory Memory Working Memory LTM Encoding Copy Phonemic Semantic Capacity Unlimited 7±2 Chunks Very Large Duration 0.25 sec. 20 sec. Years