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3.3 Memory AP Psychology Basic Definition of Memory • Mental processes involved in acquiring, storing and recovering knowledge • creates an internal record of an experience Biology and Memory • Hippocampus!!!! • Endocrine System (adrenal – arousal) • Long Term Potentiation (LTP) • Process by which long term memories are formed through strengthening of connections of neurons • When learning takes place, specific protein synthesis takes place in the nervous system; long term memory depends on this synthesis • Example… • As you hit a baseball the repeated practice builds neural pathways that make it easier to hit the ball solid Basic Tasks of Memory •Encoding - acquiring info •Storage - retaining info over time •Retrieval - recovering info from memory storage Stage 1 - Sensory Memory • Function... • Registering of new information • everything that our senses hear, see, taste, touch and smell enters • give a sense of flow and continuity to experiences that would otherwise seem to be a confusing barrage of sounds, sights, tastes, textures and odors Stage 1 - Sensory Memory cont. -capacity is large but not unlimited -holds visual images for up to one-half second -holds auditory messages for up to 2-4 seconds Stage 1 - Sensory Memory cont. •Types of Sensory Memory •- there is a sensory register for each sense •- Iconic memory - visual info •- Echoic memory - auditory info Stage 2 - Short-Term Memory (STM) •Function... •temporary storage site where sensory info is processed, evaluated, and analyzed •STM also accesses and retrieves info from LTM https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KuvF113 uty4 STM •Capacity and duration... •STM has a limited capacity - research indicates the working capacity is typically 7 pieces of info •STM holds info for approximately 30 seconds Extending capacity and duration of STM chunks and chunking... - a chunk is a single unit of info - the capacity of STM can be extended by grouping separate chunks of info in to a new unit or chunk -ie - the four digits 2-0-1-0 can be combined to form the date 2010 and thus remembered as one chunk of info Extending capacity and duration of STM •Maintenance rehearsal... • process of repeating info to keep it in STM • most students us as a way of "cramming" info before a test • will keep info fresh in STM, it is not an efficient method of transferring info to LTM Extending capacity and duration of STM •Elaborative rehearsal... •depth o processing determines how well info is remembered •process by which new info is actively review and related to info already stored in LTM Elaborative rehearsal cont. • - ie - student trying to learn the SAT vocab word vivacious might try repeating the definition "full of life" • a much more effective strategy would be to relate the English "t\word vivacious to the Spanish word vivar ("to live") • this active process of elaborative rehearsal will greatly facilitate transferring the meaning of vivacious into LTM Long-Term Memory (LTM) • Function • storehouse of information • when properly organized and integrated, info is readily available for retrieval LTM • Capacity and duration... • capacity is unlimited • duration of LTM can be permanent LTM - Procedural Memory (Implicit) • includes motor skills, habits and other memories of how things are done (recalled without conscious effort) • Examples - how to roller skate, ride a bicycle, tie a shoe • also includes classically conditioned responses to conditioned stimuli • ie - phobias and attitudes toward a variety of groups LTM - Declarative Memory (Explicit) • consists of facts and events that can be consciously recalled or "declared“ • two divisions - episodic memory (events)and semantic memory (facts) LTM - Declarative Memory Episodic Memory Semantic Memory • stores memories of personal • stores memories of facts and experiences and events general knowledge • examples • examples • first romantic kiss • Pythagorean theorem • "sweet sixteen" birthday • name of 3 branches of gov't • taking the ACT • function of STM Retrieval and LTM • The Serial-Position Effect • Primacy Effect • info from the beginning of a list is remembered better than material in the middle • Recency Effect • info from the end of a list is remembered better than material in the middle Serial-Position Effect cont. • Examples... • you remember the first and last people you meet at a party better than those you meet in-between • you remember America's first and last presidents better than those who served in the late 1800s Retrieval Cues • Recall • the use of a general cue to retrieve a memory • example • your AP Psych teacher asks you to write down everything you remember about yesterdays lesson on LTM without referring to your notes • short-answer / extended-response test Retrieval Cues cont. • Recognition • the use of a specific cue to retrieve a memory • example • your ELA teacher asks you to define the term allusion by saying, "It's like in Taylor Swift's son 'Love Story' when she says, 'Cause you were Romeo, I was a scarlet letter.'" • multiple choice test Forgetting • The Forgetting Curve - Herman Ebbinghaus (1850-1909) • invented three-letter nonsense syllables such as TIX and ZEL and then tested recall of them after varying amounts of time • shows two distinct patterns • first - memories of relatively meaningless info are lost shortly after they have been learned • second - following this initial plunge, the rate of forgetting levels off then slowly declines Forgetting cont. • Ebbinghaus forgetting curve cont. • Example… • can be applied to such common experiences as learning names at a party or cramming facts before an exam • most of the names and facts are quickly forgotten Forgetting… • Decay Theory… • ALL learning will decay if not used! • Memories deteriorate as time passes • Example…what you learn with decay during the summer Forgetting cont... • Interference Theory • forgetting takes place when one memory must compete with another similar memory • the similarity between the two memories creates interference and forgetting • Two types • Proactive and Retroactive Interference Forgetting cont... • Interference theory cont. • Proactive Interference • occurs when old information interferes with recalling new information • an old memory is moving forward to interfere with a new memory • Example • you learn and perform a dance routine for your school play • you then experience trouble remembering a new dance routine for the winter play because of proactive interference from the prior fall routine Forgetting cont... • Interference theory cont. • Retroactive Interference • occurs when new information interferes with recalling old info • new memory moves backward to interfere with an old memory • Example • You learn how to drive on a car with manual transmission ("stick shift"). Your parents then buy you a new car with an automatic transmission. On a family vacation, your parents rent a car with a "stick shift". You have trouble driving the rental car because of retroactive interference from driving your new automatic car Forgetting... • Encoding Failure • occurs when poorly encoded info is passed from the STM to the LTM • paying attention is vital to retention • divided attention is one of the most common causes of encoding failure • studies show that when we try to perform multiple tasks, the info is not properly encoded into LTM Forgetting... • Encoding Failure cont... • Example… • text-messaging a friend while parking your car at the mall • by dividing your attention between texting and parking, you created an encoding failure that might come back to haunt you a few hours later when you try to find your car Forgetting... • Retrieval Failure • an encoding failure takes place when info is not properly stored in LTM / In contrast, a retrieval failure takes place when info stored in the LTM is available, but momentarily inaccessible • interference, faulty cues, and emotional states such as test anxiety, can all cause retrieval failure Forgetting... • Retrieval Failure cont… • "Tip-of-the-tongue" phenomenon • a common example of retrieval failure • describes the feeling that at any moment a name or place you are trying to remember is just our of reach but will soon pop out from the "tip of your tongue" Amnesia • severe memory loss • two types… • Retrograde and Anterograde Amnesia Biology and Memory… Amnesia Retrograde Anterograde • unable to remember some or all of their past • automobile and motorcycle accidents are leading cause • Example • someone is in an accident and cannot recall particulars of the accident • unable to form new memories • best know case - Henry Molaison • HM suffered severe epileptic seizures and had portions of his temporal lobe (including hippocampus) removed successful in controlling seizures, BUT no new events to LTM • lives in an eternal present! Anterograde Amnesia example • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tib66tgbq6Y Memory Distortion • human memory is far from perfect • important details can be changed, exaggerated and deleted • Elizabeth Loftus is an American psychologist who is a renowned expert on memory distortion The Misinformation Effect • Phenomenon in which a persons existing memories can be altered if a person is exposed to misleading information • Loftus study... • showed subjects film of an auto accident • the subjects answered a series of questions including..."About how fast were the cars going when they contacted each other?" • Loftus then varied the question by substituting the verbs...hit, bumped, collided, smashed for the word contacted The Misinformation Effect cont. • results... • the word contacted elicited an average of 32 MPH / smashed produced an average of 41 MPH, etc. • this showed that suggestive questions provides compelling evidence of how the information a person received after an event can lead to memory distortion State Dependent Memory • You tend to recall info better if you are in the same internal state state as when the info was encoded • Example – if you drink coffee when you study for an exam, it may improve your performance if you also drink coffee before you take the exam Strategies for Memory Improvement... • Mnemonics • The Method of Loci • Acronyms Mnemonics • short phrase for improving memory • The most effective mnemonic strategies make connections between new material information already in LTM • Foolish Moms Smoke POT Acronyms • creating a code word from the first letters of items you want to remember • HOMES • Roy G. Biv The Method of Loci (Latin for place/location) • in this method, the speaker first memorizes the layout of a building, street, garden, or any geographic entity • the speaker then attaches key items to each place and retrieves the information by "walking" through the loci and allowing each place to cue the desired items • examples...AP Psych • you need to give an oral report on the types of LTM • you attach procedural to the bicycle in your garage, episodic to the pictures in the den, and semantic to the computer in your room