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Memory

Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

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Page 1: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Memory

Page 2: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Fact or Fiction?• Memory storage is never automatic; it always

takes effort.• Although our capacity for storing information is

large, we are still limited in the number of permanent memories we can form

• The hour before sleep, is a good time to commit information to memory

• When people learn something while intoxicated, they recall it best when they are again intoxicated

• Confidence is essential to eyewitness accuracy

Page 3: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

You are what you remember!

What was your earliest memory?

Psychology Today

Can you name the Seven dwarfs?

Page 4: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

What is memory process?

Get info into the brain (encode)

Retain information (storage)

Get information out (retrieval)

Page 5: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Types of Memory

• Procedural memory- memory for how to carry out skilled movement

• Episodic memory- memory regarding a personal experience

• Semantic memory- memory involving general knowledge

Page 6: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Encoding

Page 7: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Shiffrin/Atkinson Model

Visual Sensory Memory (Iconic)

Visual images stored 1-2 seconds

Auditory Sensory Memory (echoic)

Sound images last 3-4 seconds

Tactile Sensory Memory (touch)

Touch sensations last 1-2 seconds

Page 8: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Memory Processing Model

Page 9: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Herman EbbinghausMaintenance

Rehearsal Elaborate rehearsal

(rehearsal & meaning)

Schema & Constructive memory

ChunkingMeaningMnemonics

Imagery

Page 10: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Chunking

IBFIMBWBMATWIAC

Page 11: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Meaning

Page 12: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Storage

Page 13: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Short-term Memory= how does it work?

• Brief (20 seconds)

• Easily interrupted

• Limited in size

Short-term memory recall is approximately 7 digits

Magic Number 7

+ or - 2

Page 14: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Flashbulb memory= also called Episodic memory

VividLong-

LastingEmotional

Page 15: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Other Memory Types..

Semantic Memory= Memory for information

Procedural memory= Memory for actions (bike riding, swimming, tying your shoes) These are our most enduring types of memory.

Page 16: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Encoding specificity principle= we retrieve best when we can re-create the original conditions

Content dependent memory

Same physical space

State dependent memory

Same or similar emotional state

Page 17: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Forgetting as Encoding Failure

Module 23: Forgetting and Memory Construction

Page 18: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Encoding Failures

• People fail to encode information because:

– It is unimportant to them

– It is not necessary to know the information

– A decrease in the brain’s ability to encode

Page 19: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Retrieval…what if the memory is “in there” but you can’t get it

out?• Tip of the tongue phenomenon

• Recognize with “cues”

• Implicit memory= “remembering” something when we don’t realize that we do. (may need to be primed)

• Explicit memory=

Page 20: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Serial Position

Page 21: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Forgetting

Module 23: Forgetting and Memory Construction

Page 22: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Hermann Ebbinghaus (1850-1909)

• German philosopher who pioneering memory studies.

• Developed the forgetting curve, also called the “retention curve” or “Ebbinghaus curve”

Page 23: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

The Forgetting Curve(Adapted from Ebbinghaus, 1885)

Page 24: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Forgetting as Retrieval Failure:

Interference

Module 23: Forgetting and Memory Construction

Page 25: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Interference

• A retrieval problem when one memory gets in the way of remembering another

• Two types of interference:

– Proactive interference

– Retroactive interference

Page 26: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Proactive Interference

• When an older memory disrupts the recall of a newer memory.

Page 27: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Proactive Interference

Page 28: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Retroactive Interference

• When a more recent memory disrupts the recall of an older memory.

Page 29: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Retroactive Interference

Page 30: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Forgetting (The Freudian view)

Repression

Page 31: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Memory & the Brain

Much is known

And much is still being discovered

Page 32: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Long-Term Potentiation

Neural explanationWhen groups of neurons fire together repeatedly, the synaptic connections form communications

Aplysia (sea snail)

Page 33: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Memory Jigsaw Analogy

• Memories, rather than being like a video tape, are formed as bits and pieces.

• People may retrieve only some of the pieces of the memory

Page 34: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Physical Structures of memory

• The Hippocampus- new memories

• The Cerebellum-procedural memories here

• The Prefrontal cortex- “habit” learning

• The Amygdala- emotional learning

Page 35: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Elizabeth Loftus (1944- )

• Psychologist at University of California, Irvine, whose research established the constructed nature of memory.

• Has found that subjects’ memories vary based on the wording of questions

• Memories are malleable• Demonstrated the

misinformation effect

Page 36: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Misinformation Effect

• Incorporating misleading information into a memory of an event.

• Affects eyewitness testimony

Page 37: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Misinformation Effect

Page 38: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Memory Construction:Recovered Memories

Module 23: Forgetting and Memory Construction

Page 39: Memory. Fact or Fiction? Memory storage is never automatic; it always takes effort. Although our capacity for storing information is large, we are still

Accuracy of Memories