introduction to psychology chapter 7 memory. at the end of this chapter you should be able to:...
TRANSCRIPT
INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY
Chapter 7
Memory
At the end of this Chapter you should be able to:
• Understand what memory is
• Learn about working memory and long term memory
• Learn about three aspects of memory; acquisition, storage and retrieval
• Understand what happens when memory fails
Memory
• Without memory....
– No recollection of events
– No knowledge
– No reflection of past events; no giving advice to others
– No basis for self-esteem and mood
– No idea about past achivements
Acquisition, Storage, Retrieval
• Any act of memory requires success at three aspects: – Input, or the acquisition of knowledge -
Acquisiton– Creation of a memory trace, or the
storage of knowledge - Storage– Ability to use the knowledge - Retrieval
• Recall / Recognition
Acquisition
• Includes any instance of new intentional (like memorizing) or incidental learning– Incidental: What did you have for
dinner yesterday? You didn’t memorize, but you know
• Attention and engagement with to-be-remembered material is crucial; acquisition is not passive or “camera-like”
The Stage Theory of Memory
• Different types of memory, each with different properties
–Working memory (Short-term)• Instantly accessible information
– Long-term memory• Less instantly accessible
Working Memory / Long Term Memory
When we are actively working, we want information to be immediately available to us. In our brain, this happens in Working (short-term) Memory.
Long Term Memory is for extra information. It contains everything you know. It is storage for information that is not used right now but may be needed later.
Storage Capacity of Working and Long-term
memory
• Long-term memory capacity: huge
• Working memory capacity: more modest
• Memory span: way of measuring working memory capacity– Random, unrelated information: we can store
about 7, plus or minus 2, items (5 – 9 items)’– Referred to as “the magic number 7”
Working Memory
• “Loading platform” analogy• Long term memory must be “loaded” or “pass
through” WM• How does it move? How is it transformed into
Long term memory?– Rehearsed– Chunked
• Primacy Effect• Recency Effect
Chunking
• Working memory can only handle a small number of items at one time. However what these packages contain can be up to us.
149162536496481
Can you remember all of these digits?
Chunking
• If you look at these digits independently, you will fail to remember them!
• What about if you organize them differently?
1 4 9 16 25 36 49 64 81
Now you only have to remember the relationship between these items. So working memory’s capacity is dependent on these chunks, not
independent items.
Active memory and organization:
A changed emphasis
• Learner’s activities must be considered when examining memory– Maintenance rehearsal
• Primacy / Recency Effect– Processing and organizing information: the
“Royal Road into Memory”– Do you know whose picture is on 5 TL?
Athough people see 5 TL many many times, they seem to have little recollection of it’s layout
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Depth of processing
• Deep processing: – Meaning-based attention– Anything that connects new information
to already-learned material– Material that “makes sense” will be
encoded more efficiently– Results in superior recall
Depth of processing• Memory connections:
– Links among ideas– Abstract similarities
• When the time comes to recall something, these connections, established during initial learning or acquisition, can be used as retrieval paths.
• Mnemonics– “Method of loci”– Based on rhythm/rhyme/melody/visualization
Research participants shown related elements, such as a doll sitting on a chair and waving flag (A), are more likely to associate the words doll, flag and chair than participants who are shown the three objects next to each other but not interacting (B).
AA BB
Storage
• Once encoded, must be stored until needed
• Record (stored memory): memory trace or the engram
• Storage process difficult to research: But: a memory is NOT stored in a single location: different aspects of a memory can be stored in different brain structures
ConsolidationMemory traces are not created instantly. A period of time is needed after the experience to become established in memory. This makes memories permanent. (You need to sleep in order for this to take place!!!!)
• Evidence for consolidation?– Retrograde amnesia: a blow to the head can
interrupt the process of consolidation for events that happened 1-2 hours before the accident occurred
– Memory for events during that time period is lost
Retrieval• Storage is not enough; we must be able
to access the memory when needed• Inadequate coding failure to retrieve• With an adequate retrieval cue,
sometimes we realize that encoding wasn’t the problem after all. Like, if you see the person’s face, you’ll remember their name. A word or a smell may help you remember. These are all cues (hints).
Retrieval cues• Context reinstatement
– Re-creating or re-minding oneself of the context in which one originally learned something increases likelihood of being able to retrieve it later
Example: Studying for an exam in the same room you will take the test; returning to your hometown and remembering things you had “forgotten”
Memory failures• Inadequate encoding: Forgetting can often
be traced to poor or missing strategies for encoding
• Forgetting: we knew it once, but no longer– Passage of time– Can be graphed with a “forgetting curve”
– the opposite of a “learning curve”• Ebbinghaus: Memory declines with
time, more sharply at first, then more gradually
Memory failures
• Decay: a process that occurs on a cellular level by normal metabolic “wear and tear” on cells involved with memory
• Interference: New learning interferes – independent of the passage of time– Passage of time not a powerful factor
in explaining forgetting– Number of intervening events are
more useful variable to examine to explain forgetting
Other retrieval errorsRetrieval failure:
One type: the “tip of the tongue” phenomenaWho was the famous American basketball player who wore “23” as a uniform number?
Who was the man who played in the movie “Psycho”, with a knife in his hand in the shower scene?
Misinformation Effect
Imagine you eye witnessed a crime and see the thief flee in a blue car. The next day, you read a newspaper account of the same crime and learn that another witness reported that the thief fled in a green car.
How will this new information influence your memory?
The errors we make can be very large. People can be led to remember cars that were not actually present in an event, and whole buildings that do not exist. They can even recall events that never happened.
Misinformation Effect• It is common to ‘remember’
things that never happened.• Example of this is experiment
by: Wade, Garry, Read, & Lindsay (2002)
• People were shown photographs of themselves in a hot-air balloon and asked what they remembered. Most people remembered the experience. But the photos were made using photoshop. The people had never been in a hot-air balloon
Misinformation Effect
Misinformation can be used to insert new ideas into memory. In these cases the original memory may even be lost because the person who is given the misinformation (new information about an event that happened) overwrites the original memory with the fake one.
More (!) retrieval errors…
• Intrusions from general knowledge• Misplaced familiarity
– Difference between recollection memory and familiarity
Big problem for us: No reliable way to tell “good” memories (accurate) from “bad” memories (those that are false or contain misinformation or inaccuracy)
Techniques for improving memory
• How to help us create better memories? – Techniques for improving
“eyewitness identifications” that are more reliable:• Re-create mind-set• Minimize distractions/distractors
– Unhelpful techniques: • Hypnosis
Amnesia : Memory Loss• Different brain tissue supports implicit
memories as compared to explicit memories• Evident when studying anterograde
amnesia– Lesions in hippocampus and temporal
cortex: create anterograde amnesia– Lesions from other types of brain injury:
create retrograde amnesiaSupports the theory that different brain
structures/regions “handle” different types of memory
Retrograde amnesia• Forgetting the past,
but being able to make new memories. Soldiers are sometimes unable to remember their experiences in battle-even the ones that occured a day before.
Anterograde Amnesia
Anterograde means ‘in a forward direction’. May be caused by a stroke or a physical trauma.
It is essentially an inability to learn anything new/make new memories.
Anterograde Amnesia
Famous case; Patient H.M.
He could read and write. His long-term storage is completely closed to new memories. His memories before the operation remain intact. He can function and comment intellectually on events.
Anterograde Amnesia
What is wrong with H.M.?
He had an uncle that he really loved. His uncle passes away and then he is told about the death of his uncle. He was deeply distressed when told about this, but the he forgot! Some time later he would ask where his uncle was, and was again told about his death. His sadness and grief was just as intense as before each time he hears this sad news. He said he is hearing it for the first time-with all the shock and grief.
Anterograde AmnesiaIt turns out these anterograde amnesia patients can acquire some new memories. For example H.M. plays the piano and each time he plays a piece, he plays it more skillfully.
Distinction between different types of knowledge: memory for skill, memory for general knowledge, memory for episodes.
KNOWING HOW vs. KNOWING WHAT
Emotional Remembering
• Does memory for emotional events differ in any systematic way?
• Emotional events: remembered…–More vividly–More completely–More accurately
… than memories for emotion-neutral events
“Flashbulb memories”
• Especially vivid memories• Focus: immediate and personal
details• Special mechanism to produce this
type of memory? No evidence that these types of memories are in a special class with respect to immunity from error or extreme longevity
“Flashbulb memories”
They are likely to involve people we love and care about.
Some emotional memories are particularly long-lived, so that people claim to remember events from years and years ago “as if it were yesterday”.
“Flashbulb memories”
Flashbulb memories are highly special events, usually unexpected and emotionally strong. Such as 9/11 terrorist attacks to the World Trade Center, or Princess Diana’s death.
Where and who were you with when you first heard these events? Most people remember all the details…