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Memory and Cognition PSY 324 Topic: Long-term Memory- Encoding and Retrieval Dr. Ellen Campana Arizona State University Storage of Memories  Information is used in one type of memory system (STM / WM) but in order for it to stick around for longer than a few seconds it needs to be transferred into Long-term Memory   Transferring information TO LTM is called encoding or storage Vocabulary note:    Coding refers to the form in which information is represented Encoding refers to the process used to get information into LTM Transferring information OUT OF LTM in order to use it in STM/WM is called retrieval Rehearsal  We saw last chapter that in certain cases simply repeating information can cause it to be stored   Simply repeating information is called maintenance rehearsal because it is most useful for keeping the information in STM/WM   Maintenance rehearsal is actually NOT an effective way to transfer information to LTM A more effective way to encode information is through elaborative rehearsal – making connections between the new item and memories you already have   What affect showed this in the last class??? Does this sound familiar? What concept is like this in STM? Levels of Processing Theory explains these differences Levels of Processing Theory (Craik & Lockhart, 1972)  Basic idea: memory depends on the specific process used to get information into LTM  Shallow processing: little attention to meaning, based on surface characteristics   Deep processing: considering meaning and/or relating items to other information in LTM    Count the vowels Think about how useful it would be on a desert island Try the demo on page 198 (takes too long for class) Confirmed in many different studies of memory for words, but two levels turned out to be too simple Levels of Processing  Craik & Tulving (1975) introduced more levels  Shallow: A question about the physical features   Deeper: A question about rhyming   Is the word printed in capital letters? [bird] Does the word rhyme with train? [pain] Deepest: A fill-in-the-blanks question  Does the word fit in the sentence “he saw a ___ on the street”? [car] Levels of Processing % of words recalled after delay Fill-in- Rhyme theblanks Capital Letters Levels of Processing  Are you convinced?  People were, at first. But then a bunch of new tasks were tried and a people discovered a circularity in the argument What makes a level “deep”? It leads to better memory.  And why care about “depth”? It can predict memory.   Dissatisfaction with the Levels of Processing Theory coincided with introduction of a new theory about the encoding of long-term memory: Transfer-Appropriate Processing Transfer-Appropriate Processing  Basic idea: memory is best when the task at encoding matches the task at retrieval  Morris and Coworkers (1977) independently varied the tasks at encoding and retrieval Encoding tasks: meaning-task (fill-in-the-blanks) and rhyming-task  Retreival tasks: standard recognition task and rhymed recognition task (does it rhyme with a word you heard?)  Transfer-Appropriate Processing Matching Standard Recognition Test Rhymed Recognition Test % correct Fill-intheblanks Rhyme Other factors that aid encoding  NOTE: All of these are about encoding, but caused by increasing retrieval cues  Forming connections with other information More vivid /detailed => better memory  Visually imagining pairs of words => better memory    Bower & Wizenz (1970) Self-reference effect  Rogers and Coworkers (1979) Other factors that aid encoding  Generating information  The generation effect (Slameka and Graf, 1978) Read (king-crown) vs fill-ins (king-cr_____)  Memory for words that were filled in is better   Organizing information Bower and colleagues –similar groupings  Bransford and Johnson – balloon picture study  Encoding Specificity  Basic idea: Context of learning (location, etc.) can act as a retrieval cue   It’s actually good for you that we’re using scan-tron! Diver Study (who?)  Group of divers ½ learned a list on land  ½ learned a list under water  ½ tested on land  ½ tested under water  State-Dependent Learning  Basic idea: Your own internal state can act as a retrieval cue  Emotions, sleep-deprivation state, chemicals How Long-term Memories are Stored (biologically-speaking) Storage at the Synapse  Remember Chapter 2, discussion of faces? Storage at the Synapse  Representation of each face is a memory   How did these particular memories come to be represented by these particular neurons firing in this pattern? Key is in the synapses between neurons Neurotransmitters cause structural changes  Structural changes modify the firing rate of neurons   Hebbian Learning, Long-term Potentiation  “Neurons that fire together, wire together” Structure of a Neuron Storage at the Synapse Storage at the Synapse  Process of Long-term Potentiation  A and B are connected such that A’s axon synapses with B’s dendrite     Both A and B may be connected to many other neurons When A and B fire at the same time, neurotransmitters cause structural changes Effect is that over time the same stimulus will produce faster firing rates by B Hebb came up with this in 1948, but neurological evidence came much later  Important because it is used in connectionist models Fragility of New Memories  Much evidence that new memories are fragile Concussions – memory for events just prior is lost  Electroconvulsive Therapy – again, memory for events just prior is lost (at least temporarily)   Another dimension of amnesia  Retrograde amnesia – loss of declarative memory for events prior to a trauma   Graded amnesia – loss worse for more recent memories Anterograde amnesia – inability to form new memories Graded Amnesia  H.M. in your book (had hippocampus removed) Had both retrograde and anterograde amnesia  His retrograde amnesia was graded  Could remember events before 10-15yrs before operation  More recent memories, more damage  FUTURE PAST Old memories have graded damage Operation New memories are never even formed Graded Amnesia  Why talk about graded amnesia right now?  Demonstrates that recent memories are more fragile   Hippocampus involved in recent (not old) memories   Some process must make memories less fragile That’s because H.M. had no hippocampus Consolidation is the process that makes memories less fragile over time Synaptic consolidation  Systems consolidation  Process of Consolidation  Synaptic consolidation First type to be studied  Rapid, happens over the time span of minutes  Long-term Potentiation is an example   Systems consolidation Large-scale reorganization of circuits of neurons  Gradual, happens over days, weeks, months, years  Standard model of consolidation  Retrieval depends on hippocampus during consolidation  Afterwards, hippocampus no longer involved  Standard Model of Consolidation  Early on, memory is distributed across the brain, no connections between active cortical areas   Hippocampus coordinates activity across the cortical area during memory reactivation   Sights, sounds, smells, etc. Links form between active cortical areas Gradually the hippocampus is no longer involved in retrieval Standard Model of Consolidation Standard Model of Consolidation   Much of consolidation (including reactivation) happens during sleep / relaxed wakefulness Can also happen during rehearsal   Especially elaborative rehearsal Results in situation where only cortical activity is necessary for remote memories  Remote memories are memories for events that occurred long ago Consolidation Controversy  That’s the nice clean model… but there is controversy about the claim that the hippocampus completely drops out of retrieval  Evidence for no hippocampal involvement Brain imaging – Medial Temporal Lobe (which contains the hippocampus) is not active for remote memories  Used semantic, not episodic, memories   Evidence for hippocampal involvement  Brain imaging studies looking at episodic memories Test Reminders Studying for Tests     Elaborate and Generate – why? Organize – why? Associate – why? Take breaks – why?   Distributed vs. Massed Practice Effect Match Learning and Testing Conditions  ….or at least move around a lot The End
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            