Memory. Types of Memory Sensory Short term Long term

Preview:

Citation preview

Memory

Types of Memory

Sensory

Short term

Long term

Sensory Memory

What: colors, tastes, smells, tones, touch

How Stored: Unanalyzed

How Much: Everything

How Long: Measured in Milliseconds

Sensory Memory

We don't want to store everything we see feel, hear 24/7 or it would be overload

(Dreams are often made up of things we perceived but didn't attend to)

Short Term MemoryWorking Memory

What: post it note memory

solving problems in head remembering what you said after being distracted memorizing phone numbers simultaneous interpretation

How stored: analyzed and stored

How much: between 5 and 9 things

How long: 10-15 seconds

How much can we remember?

How about four letters?

Remember the letters you see

Remember the letters you see

E Z N J

Remember the letters you see

Remember the letters you see

X U V L

Remember the 7 numbers you see

Remember the 7 numbers you see

5 3 8 0 4 6 2

Remember the 7 numbers you see

Remember the 13 numbers you see

2 7 1 5 4 8 3 9 6 2 0 6 7

Remember the 13 numbers you see

Remember the 16 numbers you see

1492 1776 1945 2014

Remember the 16 numbers you see

1492 1776 1945 2014

Why is this different?

Long Term Memory

What: repository of our knowledge in world general knowledge, personal experiences

How stored: Depends on what memory it is

How much: Potentially infinite (lifelong?)

How long: Potentially infinite

Kinds of Long Term Memory

Declarative

Episodic Semantic

Procedural

Declarative Memory

Knowing what

Conscious knowledge

Knowledge of facts, events

What did you have for breakfast How do you calculate the average

Is easy to describe to others

Declarative Memory

Episodic Memory

personal memory, not shared with others memory of experiences, emotions, context autobiographical with person as actor

Semantic Memory

impersonal memory, shared with others facts, knowledge, concepts, word meaning

Procedural Memory

Knowing how (compared to what)

Unconscious, tacit, skills

ride bike chew speak

Is hard to describe to others

What kind of memory is language?

Words

Word meanings

Sentences (are they stored?)

Motor skills in speech

Ability to understand (Can you explain how?)

What if you had no short term memory?

More Clive Wearing

Word Frequency

Little Bo-Peep has lost her sheep,

And can't tell where to find them;

Leave them alone, And they'll come home,

Wagging their tails behind them.

Token frequency of them: 3

Type frequency of them: 1

Word Frequency

The North Wind and the Sun disputed as to which was the most powerful, and agreed that he should be declared the victor who could first strip a

wayfaring man of his clothes.

Token frequency of -ed: 3

Type frequency of -ed: 1

Token frequency of past tense: 4

Number of types of past tense: 2

What makes speech perception hard

Sounds are not put side by side like letters are

A round lemon and a melon (In PRAAT) Different people have different voices

Different people have different accents

The same person's pronunciation of same word is never exactly the same

Speech sounds are on a continuum, are not categorical

What makes speech perception hard

Speech sounds are on a continuum, are not categorical Speech sounds are on a continuum, are not categorical Speech sounds are on a continuum, are not categorical

What makes speech perception hard

Speech sounds are on a continuum, are not categorical Speech sounds are on a continuum, are not categorical Speech sounds are on a continuum, are not categorical

These are all [I], but they differ

Light compared to speech

We can say color is halfway between blue and green (continuous perception)

Even though two speech sounds may be different we don't say “that consonant is halfway between [d] and [t] (categorical perception)

Motor Theory of Speech Perception

How can you account for perception in the face of so much variation?

If speaking and hearing activate same parts of brain then hearing it helps you know how you say it and vice versa

Speech Perception

So articulatory features help perception

Could visual features affect perception?

McGurk Effect

Recommended