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FORGETTING ??? FORGETTING Forgetting refers to the inability to retrieve previously stored information. When you forget something it means that it is unavailable to you at the time you are trying to remember it. The information may be stored in your memory, but for some reason you are unable to retrieve it. Although forgetting results in the loss of information and many skills, if you did not forget, your mind would be cluttered with so much information that you would have great difficulty retrieving and selecting the information that you needed. Like remembering forgetting has an adaptive purpose and contributes to our survival and our sanity. THE FORGETTING CURVE Hermann Ebbinghaus was a German psychologist who was the first to scientifically study forgetting in the late 1800’s. To measure the amount of information retained and the rate at which information is forgotten, Ebbinghaus conducted an experiment using himself as the only participant. The experiment involved him learning a series of lists of nonsense syllables, until he could recite them without error on two separate occasions. Ebbinghaus tested his recall for each list after a specific period of time had elapsed from the initial learning. He first learned one list, then tested his recall after a specific delay period. Then he learned another list, tested his recall after another delay period, and so on. The delay ranged from 20 minutes to 31 days. Ebbinghaus was then able to measure the amount and rate of forgetting. - FINDINGS: 20 minutes after initial learning he could remember 58% of nonsense syllables. One hour after learning his retention was 44%. A day later he could recall 34%. A week later his recall had fallen to around 21%. This data, once plotted on a graph became known as the forgetting curve. The forgetting curve shows the pattern of forgetting that occurs over time. Generally the graph shows that forgetting is rapid soon after the original learning, then the rate of memory loss gradually declines, followed by stability in the memories that remain. More than half of the memory loss occurs in the first hour of learning. Virtually all the information that will be forgotten is lost in the first eight hours. This pattern of forgetting tends to occur for a range of materials under many conditions. The more meaningful the material, the slower the rate of forgetting. The amount and rate are also influenced by how well the information was initially encoded- the better the initial learning, the longer the material is likely to be retained. THEORIES OF FORGETTING Psychologists have developed a number of theories to explain why we forget. Forgetting may occur because: 1. The right retrieval cue is not used 2. There is interference from competing material 3. Memory fades through disuse over time RETRIEVAL FAILURE THEORY If you have ever experienced a ‘mental blank’ in an exam or in a job interview, only to recall the exact information at a later point in time, you have experienced retrieval failure. Most of the time we can retrieve information from LTM with relative ease. This is because most of the time you are able to retrieve information from the various storage systems in your LTM using a retrieval cue to locate the relevant information. A retrieval cue is any stimulus that assists the process of locating and recovering information stored in memory. It is a prompt or cue to guide the search and recovery process within memory. According to retrieval failure theory we sometimes forget because we lack or fail to use the right cues to retrieve information stored in memory. This explanation of forgetting suggests that memories stored in LTM are not actually forgotten, but are temporarily inaccessible. One of the most frequent experiences of retrieval failure is the tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon (TOT). This is the feeling of being aware of knowing something, being confident that you will remember it at any moment, but not being able to retrieve the information at that point in time. INTERFERENCE THEORY Sometimes memories can interfere with each other. This is called interference. Interference theory proposes that forgetting in LTM occurs because other memories interfere with the retrieval of what we are trying to recall, particularly if the other memories are similar. If learning of similar material occurs close in time, interference is more likely. There are two types of interference: 1. Retroactive interference 2. Proactive interference RETROACTIVE INTERFERENCE When new information interferes with the ability to remember old information, psychologists refer to the interference as retroactive interference. Eg. You are at a party and you are introduced to a guy named John. Not long after you are introduced to Jim. After a while you bump into John again but accidentally call him Jim. With retroactive interference, new learning interferes with the retrieval of previously learned material. PROACTIVE INTERFERENCE Interference also works in the opposite direction. Information learned previously can interfere with our ability to remember new information. This effect is called proactive interference. According to interference theory, interference primarily comes from memories of similar information. MOTIVATED FORGETTING Motivated forgetting refers to the inability to retrieve information because the individual derives some benefit from not remembering. Sigmund Freud was one of the first to consider the idea of motivated forgetting, which he called repression. He claimed that it was an unconscious, unintentional process through which the individual may avoid feelings of anxiety about traumatic events. An important feature of repressed memories is that although they may not be readily accessible to conscious recollection, they may still be retained. Eg. Hypnosis Memories that are retrieved from the unconscious are called recovered memories. Not all motivated forgetting is unconscious- an individual may quite intentionally and consciously want to forget something. This is called suppression. DECAY THEORY Some psychologists suggest that forgetting is a process of decay. Memories that are formed and not used begin to fade, become weaker with time, and eventually decay to the point where they can no longer be recollected- that is, they are forgotten. This theory, known as decay theory, was first proposed by Edward Thorndike in 1914. The decay of memory over time may be the result of deterioration in the connections between the neurons that combine to make up a memory trace. Decay theory suggests that memories that are not retrieved or rehearsed dissipate over time as the synaptic connections between neurons that constitute the memory trace begin to degrade. ORGANIC CAUSES OF FORGETTING Organic causes of forgetting are due to damage to the brain, such as: - a head injury disease severe malnutrition stroke necessary brain surgery long-term alcoholism. - - Any loss of memory is referred to as amnesia. Amnesia is often an indicator of brain damage, and may help to define the nature and extent of the damage. AMNESIA Various types of amnesia have been defined, relating to the time at which the event that resulted in the brain damage took place. It is easier to establish the exact time of brain injury in cases of head injury or stroke than when amnesia results from progressive forms of brain damage caused by alcohol or Alzheimer’s disease. There are two main types of amnesia: Anterograde amnesia Retrograde amnesia - ANTEROGRADE AMNESIA A brain injury patient who suffers memory loss for events that occur after the brain is damaged has anterograde amnesia. Patients can usually remember and talk about events that occurred prior to their brain injury, but cannot remember information about what has happened since the event. The structure in the brain called the hippocampus, located under the temporal lobes, is critical to the ability to form new memories. Damage to this structure is thought to result in severe anterograde amnesia. The information processing model of memory offers one explanation for anterograde amnesia. According to this model, for information to be permanently implanted in memory it must pass through the three stages of mental processingsensory memory, STM and LTM. For people who experience anterograde amnesia, information enters sensory memory, is attended to and transferred to STM. It can be manipulated in STM and rehearsed indefinitely, but no permanent memories can be formed. RETROGRADE AMNESIA An inability to remember information that was acquired before brain damage is called retrograde amnesia. (Retro refers to backward, and refers to memory loss that goes back in time). The extent of retrograde amnesia varies greatly, ranging from moments to days, weeks or even years. The amount of time over which memories are affected is often related to the severity of the damage to the brain. In most cases resulting from a brain injury, there is some recovery of the lost memories- usually with memory for older events recovering first. However, there always seems to be a period – usually just prior to the time when the brain injury occurred- for which there is no recovery of memory, and the amnesia is absolute. In cases that are as a result of other damage to the brain, such as Alzheimer’s disease, the extent of the amnesia is often not clearly defined and the recovery of the lost memories is rare. The information processing model of memory explains retrograde amnesia in terms of an interruption to the consolidation of the memory trace. In the period of time just prior to the brain trauma, a memory trace was forming as information was being processed from STM to LTM. At the point of the trauma, the consolidation process was interrupted and therefore the memory of information just prior to the injury will not be consolidated and therefore lost forever. MEMORY DECLINE OVER THE LIFESPAN Most people believe that memory decline is a natural part of ageing. Research shows however, that although there is some natural decline in memory with age, memory is not an inevitable consequence of ageing. If a decline in memory is experienced through ageing, effects are more likely to be experienced in working memory and the declarative memory systems (episodic and semantic memories) than in procedural memories. EFFECTS OF AGEING ON STM The impact of age on STM seems to depend on the nature of the task. If the task is simple it should not be affected by age. If the task is more complex, age related factors may impact on effective STM functioning. Neuroimaging studies have shown that beyond 60 years of age, there is a decrease in the activation of areas of the frontal lobes of the brain believed to be involved in STM. EFFECTS OF AGEING ON LTM Research findings indicate that some LTM stores are more likely to be affected by age than others. Episodic memory is the most likely to decline with age and this decline can start as early as 30 or as late as 50. Although many semantic and procedural memories are not easily lost, older people take longer to learn new information and skills. It seems that older people do not encode new information with as much detail or as precisely as young people. The speed and fluency of retrieval of information from semantic memory is particularly prone to decline. One explanation for this is lack of motivation. There is however less age-related decline for memory tasks in which a person is motivated to remember something. Eg. Taking a cake out of the oven. A second explanation is that as people get older they tend to lose confidence in their memory. A third explanation is that the inability of some older people to access information from LTM may be more to do with the kind of measure of retention used that with their age. The most common reason is a process called cognitive slowing. This refers to the slowing of Central Nervous System functioning and the inability to effectively process information the way a person may once have. This occurs because the frontal lobe shrinks as age progresses and therefore cognitive function is influenced by this process. ENHANCING MEMORY We can rely on specific mental strategies if we want to improve our memory. Sometimes we are able to remember information simply because it stands out or is unusual. Other information requires conscious effort in order for it to be remembered. To ensure that information goes beyond sensory memory we must pay attention to it. It must also be organised and integrated into LTM with information already in LTM. QUALITY OF ENCODING An effective way of enhancing retrieval is to ensure that the information is properly encoded in LTM and integrated into information already stored in LTM. This can be done through elaboration. Elaboration describes the way in which new information is made more meaningful by linking it to known information already stored in LTM. The more extensively information is elaborated (through elaborative rehearsal), the deeper the level of processing of that information, the more likely it is to be remembered. Self-referencing is another effective way to improve memory by elaborating information. Self-referencing involves relating new information to personal experiences or your personal situation in some way. One reason that elaboration produces effective memory is that it adds to the distinctiveness of the ‘codes’ used for LTM. CONTEXT- AND STATEDEPENDENT CUES Another effective way of enhancing retrieval from LTM is to re-create the conditions under which the required information was originally learned. This approach is based on the encoding specificity principle. This principle involves a general ‘rule’ that the more closely the retrieval cues match the original learning conditions, the more likely it is that the information will be recalled. CONTEXT-DEPENDENT CUES Why is it that police investigating a crime may take an eyewitness back to the crime scene, particularly if the witness is having some trouble recalling some of the details of what they saw which are critical to the investigation? The answer is based on research findings that cues in the environment may be important in helping to locate and retrieve related memories. Context-dependent cues are environmental cues in the specific context (setting) where a memory was formed, which act as retrieval cues to help access the memories formed in that context. These cues may include the sights, sounds and smells within the specific situation. The context dependency of certain memories helps explain why an eyewitness may recall apparently forgotten information about a crime when they return to the scene of the crime. STATE-DEPENDENT CUES State-dependent cues are associated with an individual’s internal physiological and/or psychological state at the time the memory was formed, which act as retrieval cues to help access those memories. It seems that taking a drug can produce an internal state with unique psychological and physiological characteristics, aspects of which may become encoded with new memories. At a later point, the same internal state can provide additional retrieval cues that assist recovery of information from memory. Your mood also provides state-dependent cues. We seem to associate good or bad events with their accompanying emotional state. This means that our emotional state becomes a retrieval cue when we feel good or bad again, and they trigger memories that are consistent with the mood. However, when we are happy, happy events are recalled; but when we feel down, our minds can become flood with sad or negative events of the past which in turn darken our interpretations of current events. MNEMONIC DEVICES Techniques for enhancing or improving memory are known as mnemonic devices. A mnemonic device is any internal strategy or method that makes it easier to encode, store or retrieve information. Mnemonic devices may be visual or verbal, and they generally impose some sort of organisation on the material to be remembered. Mnemonic strategies are always entirely internal. Memory aids such as writing a shopping list are not mnemonic strategies because they rely on external items (in this case a pen and paper). Narrative chaining Method of loci Peg word method Acronyms, acrostics and rhyming NARRATIVE CHAINING The link method is a mnemonic device that involves linking each item in a list with the previous item, so that the items form a mental chain of images. Recalling the items involves visiting each of the links in the chain. Narrative chaining involves linking the items through the development of a story, or narrative, rather than a series of images. METHOD OF LOCI The method of loci is a mnemonic that relies on the use of a well-learned pathway with distinct locations that can be associated with the items to be remembered. To use the method of loci, you need to recall a sequence of distinct locations and associate them with each word to be remembered. Imagine yourself walking through a house and associate each word on a list with an item in each room. When you need to recall a list of words, imagine yourself revisiting the house and walking through the same rooms-this will probably cause you to remember the word you associated with each location. Experimental investigation of the method of loci has found that participants more than doubled the number of words they were able to recall when using the method of loci, compared to when relying on free recall.