Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information...

34
Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory

Transcript of Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information...

Page 1: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 1

Chapter 7: Human Memory

Page 2: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 2

Human Memory: Basic Questions

EncodingHow does information get into memory?StorageHow is information maintained in memory?RetrievalHow is information pulled back out of memory?

Page 3: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 3

Figure 7.2 Three key processes in memory

Page 4: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 4

Encoding: Getting Information Into Memory

• The role of attention

• Focusing awareness

• Selective attention = selection of input– Filtering: early or late?

Page 5: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 5

Figure 7.3 Models of selective attention

Page 6: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 6

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: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 7

Figure 7.4 Levels-of-processing theory

Page 8: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 8

Figure 7.5 Retention at three levels of processing

Page 9: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 9

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

Page 10: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 10

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

Page 11: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 11

Figure 7.7 The Atkinson and Schiffrin model of memory storage

Page 12: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 12

Sensory Memory

• Brief preservation of information in original sensory form

• Auditory/Visual – approximately ¼ second– George Sperling (1960)

• Classic experiment on visual sensory store

Page 13: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 13

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

Page 14: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 14

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

Page 15: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 15

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

Page 16: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 16

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

Page 17: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 17

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

Page 18: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 18

How is Knowledge Representedand Organized in Memory?

• Clustering and Conceptual Hierarchies

• Schemas and Scripts

• Semantic Networks

• Connectionist Networks and PDP Models

Page 19: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 19

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

Page 20: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 20

Forgetting: When Memory Lapses

• Retention – the proportion of material retained– Recall – Recognition – Relearning

• Ebbinghaus’s Forgetting Curve

Page 21: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 21

Figure 7.16 Ebbinghaus’ forgetting curve for nonsense syllables

Page 22: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 22

Figure 7.17 Recognition versus recall in the measurement of retention

Page 23: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 23

Why Do We Forget?

• Ineffective Encoding

• Decay theory

• Interference theory– Proactive– Retroactive

Page 24: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 24

Figure 7.19 Retroactive and proactive interference

Page 25: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 25

Figure 7.20 Estimates of the prevalence of childhood physical and sexual abuse

Page 26: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 26

Retrieval Failure

• Encoding Specificity

• Transfer-Appropriate Processing

• Repression– Authenticity of repressed memories?– Memory illusions– Controversy

Page 27: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 27

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

Page 28: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 28

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

Page 29: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 29

The Physiology of Memory

• Anatomy– Anterograde and Retrograde Amnesia

• Cerebral cortex, Prefrontal cortex, Hippocampus,• Dentate gyrus, Amygdala, Cerebellum

Page 30: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 30

Figure 7.23 The anatomy of memory

Page 31: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 31

Figure 7.25 Retrograde versus anterograde amnesia

Page 32: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 32

Are There Multiple Memory Systems?

• Declarative vs. Procedural

• Semantic vs. Episodic

• Prospective vs. Retrospective

Page 33: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 33

Figure 7.26 Theories of independent memory systems

Page 34: Page 1 Chapter 7: Human Memory. Page 2 Human Memory: Basic Questions Encoding How does information get into memory? Storage How is information maintained.

Page 34

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