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Memory • Videos Ceci : suggestibility in kids Amnesia: worth Memory Processes Rehearsal Encoding Attention Sensory Memory Working Memory Retrieval (aka Short Term Memory) Long-Term Memory (LTM) Free Recall Task - Listen a list of words (10-40), - at the end write all the words you remember - you can list them in any order. Serial Position Function Probability of reporting the item ? 12 ……… Position in Original List 30 List Length 20 30 10 20 Position in Original List 30 40 Prob. Of Rept. 1 40 Serial position effects are consistent over different list sizes... Primacy Recency Privileged rehearsal better Long Term Memory encoding Working Memory contribution LTM STM Working memory 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Is it like silent speech? How much info can you hold in verbal WM? What is WM for? Is there a ‘visual’ WM? Is there a ‘central executive’ that coordinate info? 1. Verbal Working Memory: is it like silently repeating the words in your head? Yes! Sound-like short-term store Verbal information written language is recoded as sound Silent rehearsal process 1. Evidence that Verbal Working Memory is like silently repeating the words in your head • Memory span task: – Read a list of items. Repeat them after a while (5 secs). • Results: – Words that sound alike (mad, cat, man, map, cat): lots of errors – Words with similar meaning (huge, long, tall, big, wide): few errors – Words that look similar (cough, dough, through): :few errors • Conclusion: – Information is stored as sound in verbal Working Memory 1. Evidence that Verbal Working Memory is like silently repeating the words in your head • Word length effect: – memory span for “sum, wit, harm” is better than for “opportunity, individual, university” because it takes shorter to articulate (to say silently) • People who talk fast have larger memory span • Patients whose speech is impaired (aphasia) are also impaired in verbal working memory • The brains areas active during speech are also active during verbal WM. Neural overlap between verbal WM and language Speech production areas and language receptive areas are active when people try to remember phonological (sound like) information 2. Capacity of verbal WM Capacity: How many things can you hold in verbal WM? Digit span task: Results: 7 + 2 items • But what counts as an item? – A digit? A word? A letter? A sentence? – An association (a pointer) to a representation in longterm memory (i.e, chunking) Ready for a test B F K EJ F I KARA F D Another trial F B I J F KC I A F D R F B I C I A F D R J F K chunking allows storage of greater amounts of information…because information is “packaged” more efficiently 3. What is Working Memory for? 1. Keeping information available: mentally reciting a telephone before writing it down. Pretty dumb task 2. 3. Reading, problem solving: mentally rotating the image in the instructions when building IKEA furniture 4. 5. mental arithmetic: Calculate how much to tip the waiter? Reasoning 4. Working Memory for Visual information Color squares (set size 1-12) for 100 ms 900 ms Blank Color squares (set size 1-12) for 100 ms ~ 4 objects Remembered - No interference with verbal WM load: separate systems Short-Term Working Memory: A multi-part system Central Executive -All the WM tasks discussed so far are pretty ‘dumb’. (coordination) Rehearsal -Humans are capable of doing much more with their WM. Visual WM Verbal WM - Something has to coordinate all the parts of WM. - Capacity: 4-5 - Capacity: 7 + 2 -It stores ‘objects’ - & spatial locations - It stores ‘sounds’ -- acoustic code - It has buffer and rehearsal The Central Executive • Supervise attention • Planning/Coordination • Monitoring Frontal lobe syndrome • Distractibility, difficulty concentrating • Problems with organization, planning • Perseveration: – fail to stop inappropriate behavior Memory Processes Rehearsal Attention Sensory Memory •Very rapid decay •Modality specific Encoding Retrieval Working Memory (WM) Long-Term Memory (LTM) • Limited Capacity (7+2) •Unlimited capacity •Consciously available •Hard to get stuff in it • Flexible material •Organized by meaning •Decays if not rehearsed (semantically) ++++++++ Different domains: Visual, Verbal, etc.+++++++++ LTM Types of Knowledge (memory) Declarative Semantic Memory 2+2, sky is blue Procedural Episodic Memory The Eagles won; ‘cook’ was a word in the list Affected by Amnesia The distinction emphasized by the declarative/procedural model is in terms of the kind of information being represented (i.e. knowledge that can be reported verbally vs motor skills). Another Possible architecture of: Memory Systems Implicit Memory Explicit Memory Priming Semantic Memory Skill & Habit Learning Episodic Memory 2+2, sky is blue Affected by Amnesia Classical Conditioning This emphasizes how information is accessed (conscious vs automatic) ‘Of two men with the same outward experiences and the same amount of mere native tenacity, the one who thinks over his experiences the most, and weaves them into systematic relations with each other, will be the one with the best memory’ William James, 1890 Moving information into Long Term Memory 1. Mere exposure hypothesis: – The more we see/hear something, the better will encode it into long term memory Is mere exposure enough? The Penny Test (Nickerson &Adams, 1979) Is mere exposure enough? No! (Nickerson &Adams, 1979) Moving information into Long Term Memory 1. Mere exposure: – No! The more we see/hear something, the better will encode it into long term memory (LTM) 2. Maintenance rehearsal: No! – The more you keep it in working memory, the better will encode into LTM 3. Elaborative rehearsal: YES! – The more you process the meaning and integrate it with what you already know, the better it will be encoded in LTM Importance of Meaningful Organization Evidence that elaborative rehearsal is best Instructions that foster shallow processing: ‘Decide whether the two words written in same case’ How to succeed in this task: pay attention to the font Examples HUGE-enormous gloves- pants DISASTER- CATASTROPHE Answer no yes yes Surprise memory test: poor memory Evidence that elaborative rehearsal is best Instructions that foster elaborative processing: ‘Decide whether the two words are synonymous’ How to succeed in this task: pay attention to word meaning Examples HUGE-enormous gloves- pants DISASTER- CATASTROPHE Answer yes no yes Surprise memory test: good memory! Since elaborative rehearsal is best, so why not use it all the time? Because it’s hard work, dude! • Maintenance rehearsal (e.g. phone number): – rote mechanical process – requires little effort, • Elaborative rehearsal (e.g. exam; phone of cute guy): – Semantic processing & relations to background knowledge – leads to better long-term retention, but – requires effort Memory Stages: Encoding Retention Retrieval Retrieval: the role of organization • Example: – In one minute, name as many animals as you can • Retrieval Plan (Organization) – – – – Zoo: Farm: Pests: Pets: How to improve your memory: Factors that enhance long-term memory 1. Understand the information (semantic organization) 2. Have a background knowledge on the material (it gives you a better chance of understanding) 3. Metacognition (Know how memory works): – Use right memory strategy: for example, choose elaborative rehearsal over maintenance rehearsal – Organize the to-be-remembered items: cluster items into meaningful categories such as vegetables, fruits, cleaning stuff – response criterion: Decide when you to keep your mouth shut 4. Encoding specificity: study in the same context you will be tested 5. Space your learning sessions (rather than massed learning) 6. Emotion Amnesia Anterograde: events since brain trauma Retrograde: events prior to brain trauma Anterograde amnesia in patient HM Figure 5.9 The Hippocampus Patient Schacter, Gilbert and Wegner: Psychology, First Edition Copyright © 2009 by Worth Publishers Bitemporal Lobectomy - Performed as treatment for epileptic seizures - “Success” except for anterograde amnesia Patient H.M. * had such a surgery in 1953 (age 29) * normal IQ, digit span, conversation, motor learning Priming in anterograde amnesia • Study phase: “is this word pleasant or not? • Test phase: – Recognition [Was “scorch” on study list?] or – Word Stem Completion: Complete “sco_ _ _” • Impaired recognition but normal stem completion (i.e., as likely as normal subject to complete stems with words that were observed earlier). (Graf, Squire, & Mandler, 1984) Implicit Memory: Mirror drawing task Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2009 Tip-of-the-Tongue Phenomenon • The experience of knowing that we know something but are unable to access it • Memory was stored, but not retrieved properly Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2009 Brain Changes with Alzheimer’s Disease Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2009 Biology of Memory Deterioration • Alzheimer’s disease – 13% of those over 65 years, 42% over 85 – Dementia - overall cognitive decline, including severe memory and language loss – Brain pathology • Plaques and tangles • Cell death: early = hippocampus, later = cortex and others • Loss of acetylcholine cells in the basal forebrain - give medications to replace acetylcholine, aid memory Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2009 Table 5.1 Schacter, Gilbert and Wegner: Psychology, First Edition Copyright © 2009 by Worth Publishers Memory Development • From the crib to elementary school, children’s memories improve dramatically due to – Memory span increasing with age (rehearsal, physical maturation) – Increasing conceptual knowledge of the world – Development of meta-memory skills Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2009 Infant Implicit Memories: Talking with Their Feet • Infants as young as 2 months demonstrate implicit memory days after conditioning Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2009 Infantile Amnesia • We are unable to recall personal experiences that took place before about 3 to 5 years of age • Why? Theories: – Hippocampus is not yet developed, so we can’t retain new explicit memories – Infants have little or no sense of self Copyright © Allyn & Bacon 2009