Chapter 7: Human Memory. Human Memory: Basic Questions How does information get into memory? How...

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Chapter 7: Human Memory

Transcript of Chapter 7: Human Memory. Human Memory: Basic Questions How does information get into memory? How...

Page 1: Chapter 7: Human Memory. Human Memory: Basic Questions  How does information get into memory?  How is information maintained in memory?  How is information.

Chapter 7: Human Memory

Page 2: Chapter 7: Human Memory. Human Memory: Basic Questions  How does information get into memory?  How is information maintained in memory?  How is information.

Human Memory: Basic Questions

How does information get into memory?

How is information maintained in memory?

How is information pulled back out of memory?

Page 3: Chapter 7: Human Memory. Human Memory: Basic Questions  How does information get into memory?  How is information maintained in memory?  How is information.

Figure 7.2 Three key processes in memory

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Encoding: Getting Information Into Memory

The role of attention

Focusing awareness

Selective attention = selection of input

Filtering: early or late?

Multitasking

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Figure 7.3 Models of selective attention

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Levels of Processing:Craik and Lockhart (1972)

Incoming information processed at different levels

Deeper processing = longer lasting memory codes

Encoding levels: Structural = shallow Phonemic = intermediate Semantic = deep

Page 7: Chapter 7: Human Memory. Human Memory: Basic Questions  How does information get into memory?  How is information maintained in memory?  How is information.

Figure 7.4 Levels-of-processing theory

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Figure 7.5 Retention at three levels of processing

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Enriching Encoding: Improving Memory

Elaboration = linking a stimulus to other information at the time of encoding Thinking of examples

Visual Imagery = creation of visual images to represent words to be remembered Easier for concrete objects: Dual-coding

theory

Self-Referent Encoding Making information personally meaningful

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Storage: Maintaining Information in Memory

Analogy: information storage in computers ~ information storage in human memory

Information-processing theories

Subdivide memory into 3 different stores

Sensory, Short-term, Long-term

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Figure 7.7 The Atkinson and Schiffrin model of memory storage

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Sensory Memory

Brief preservation of information in original sensory form

Auditory/Visual – approximately ¼ second

George Sperling (1960)

Classic experiment on visual sensory store

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Figure 7.8 Sperling’s (1960) study of sensory memory

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Short Term Memory (STM)

Limited capacity – magical number 7 plus or minus 2

Chunking – grouping familiar stimuli for storage as a single unit

Limited duration – about 20 seconds without rehearsal

Rehearsal – the process of repetitively verbalizing or thinking about the information

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Figure 7.9 Peterson and Peterson’s (1959) study of short-term memory

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Short-Term Memory as “Working Memory”

STM not limited to phonemic encoding

Loss of information not only due to decay

Baddeley (1986) – 3 components of working memory Phonological rehearsal loop Visuospatial sketchpad Executive control system

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Working Memory Capacity

Influences ability to control focus of attention

Capacity correlates positively with measures of high-level cognitive abilities

Critical to complex cognitive processes and intelligence

Declines gradually during late adulthood

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Long-Term Memory: Unlimited Capacity

Permanent storage?

Flashbulb memories

Recall through hypnosis

Debate: are STM and LTM really different?

Phonemic vs. Semantic encoding

Decay vs. Interference based forgetting

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How is Knowledge Representedand Organized in Memory?

Clustering and Conceptual Hierarchies

Schemas and Scripts

Semantic Networks

Connectionist Networks and PDP Models

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Figure 7.13 Conceptual hierarchies and long-term memory.

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Figure 7.14 A semantic network..

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Retrieval: Getting InformationOut of Memory

The tip-of-the-tongue phenomenon – a failure in retrieval Retrieval cues

Recalling an event Context cues

Reconstructing memories Misinformation effect

Source monitoring, reality monitoring

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Forgetting: When Memory Lapses

Retention – the proportion of material retained

Recall

Recognition

Relearning

Ebbinghaus’s Forgetting Curve

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Figure 7.17 Ebbinghaus’ forgetting curve for nonsense syllables

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Figure 7.18. Recognition versus recall in the measurement of retention.

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Why Do We Forget?

Ineffective Encoding

Decay theory

Interference theory

Proactive

Retroactive

Forgetting as adaptation

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Figure 7.19 Retroactive and proactive interference

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Retrieval Failure

Encoding Specificity Transfer-Appropriate Processing Repression

Authenticity of repressed memories Memory illusions Controversy

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Figure 7.21 Estimates of the prevalence of childhood physical and sexual abuse

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Figure 7.22 The prevalence of false memories observed by Roediger and McDermott (1995)

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The Physiology of Memory

Biochemistry Alteration in synaptic transmission

Hormones modulating neurotransmitter systems

Protein synthesis

Neural circuitry Localized neural circuits

Reusable pathways in the brain Long-term potentiation Neurogenesis

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The Physiology of Memory

Anatomy

Anterograde and Retrograde Amnesia

Cerebral cortex, Prefrontal cortex, Hippocampus,

Dentate gyrus, Amygdala, Cerebellum

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Figure 7.23 The anatomy of memory

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Figure 7.24 Retrograde versus anterograde amnesia

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Are There Multiple Memory Systems?

Declarative vs. Procedural

Semantic vs. Episodic

Prospective vs. Retrospective

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Figure 7.25 Theories of independent memory systems

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Improving Everyday Memory

Engage in adequate rehearsal

Distribute practice and minimize interference

Emphasize deep processing and transfer-appropriate processing

Organize information

Use verbal mnemonics

Use visual mnemonics