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Ebbinghauss Pioneering Studies of Memory

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Declarative memory is the ability to state a fact. ... for Ebbinghaus may have been the fact that he memorized so many lists of nonsense syllables ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ebbinghauss Pioneering Studies of Memory


1
Ebbinghauss Pioneering Studies of Memory
  • Hermann Ebbinghaus studied
  • invented over 2300 nonsense syllables and put
    them into random lists.

2
Ebbinghauss Pioneering Studies of Memory
  • Lists and serial-order effects
  • primacy effect
  • tendency to remember beginning of list
  • recency effect
  • tendency to remember items at end of list

3
Ebbinghauss Pioneering Studies of Memory
  • Dependence of memory on method of testing
  • Recall (or free recall) simplest method for the
    tester but most difficult for person being tested
  • To recall something is to produce it, as is done
    on essay and short-answer tests.

4
Ebbinghauss Pioneering Studies of Memory
  • Dependence of memory on method of testing
  • Recognition requires person being tested to
    identify correct item from a list of choices
  • Multiple-choice tests use recognition method.

5
Other Memory Distinctions
  • Declarative memory is the ability to state a
    fact.
  • Procedural memory is the memory of how to do
    something.
  • Long-term declarative memory classified as
  • semantic (dealing with principles of knowledge)
    or
  • episodic (containing events details of life
    history.)
  • memory of recent piano lesson is declarative
    episodic memory of how to read music is
    semantic memory of how to play piano is
    procedural

6
Ebbinghauss Pioneering Studies of Memory
  • processes tested by Ebbinghaus involved explicit
    memory memory we are aware we are using
  • Implicit (indirect) memory is other major memory
    process
  • any experience that influences us without our
    awareness
  • Priming process that activates implicit memory

7
The Information-Processing View of Memory
  • draws an analogy between a computer and the
    workings of memory in the human brain.
  • According to this view, information enters the
    system, is processed and coded in various ways,
    and is then stored.

8
The Information-Processing View of Memory
  • The sensory store
  • more accurately described as a combination of
    memory perception, the sensory store is
    considered 1st stage of memory processing
  • very brief (less than a second) stage that
    registers everything perceived in the moment that
    we call now

9
The Information-Processing View of Memory
  • Short-term and long-term memory
  • Temporary storage of information someone has just
    encountered is short-term memory
  • Long-term memory is a relatively permanent
    storage of mostly meaningful information.
  • Retrieval Cues
  • Reminders or hints that help us to retrieve
    information from long-term memory

10
The Information-Processing View of Memory
  • Short-term memory
  • If a friend asks you what was just said in class,
    and you were paying attention, you could repeat
    it, or something close to it.
  • If you were not paying attention, you would not
    recall it. Attention moves information from the
    sensory store to short-term memory.

11
The Information-Processing View of Memory
  • Long-term memory

12
The Information-Processing View of Memory
  • Capacities of short and long-term memory
  • Most adults can immediately repeat a list of
    about seven bits or pieces of information, with
    expected variations in range from 5-9 items
  • magic range of 7 /- 2 bits is a
    well-replicated finding regarding STM
  • It can be expanded through techniques such as
    chunking into larger, meaningful units.

13
The Information-Processing View of Memory
  • Decay of short and long-term memory
  • Information stored in LTM may be vulnerable to
    effects of interference, but generally does not
    decay due to the effects of time alone
  • Information held in STM is vulnerable to effects
    of time
  • Forgetting tends to begin in seconds unless
    rehearsal is permitted

14
The Information-Processing View of Memory
  • Capacities of short and long-term memory
  • If information held in STM is meaningful, it will
    be transferred easily to LTM and be less subject
    to decay
  • once called consolidation - formation LTM

15
The Information-Processing View of Memory
  • Working memory is a concept of
  • intermediate stage between our 1st encounter with
    new information and its eventual storage
  • Working memory processes or works with current
    information
  • Working memory is conceptualized as having three
    major components.

16
The Information-Processing View of Memory
  • Working memorys 3 components
  • phonological loop that stores and rehearses
    information, similar to the 7 /- 2 idea from the
    traditional concept of STM
  • A visuospatial sketchpad that stores and
    manipulates visual and spatial information.
  • Central executive that governs shifts of
    attention can handle shifts among multiple
    aspects of complex tasks

17
Meaningful Storage and Levels of Processing
  • The levels-of-processing principle
  • ease with which we can retrieve a memory depends
    on the number and types of associations that we
    form with that memory
  • More ways in which you think about the material,
    the deeper your processing will be more easily
    you remember the material

18
Use of Special Coding Strategies
  • Retrieval Cues
  • are bits of associated information that help you
    to regain complex memories for later use.

19
Use of Special Coding Strategies
  • Retrieval Cues
  • encoding specificity principle states that the
    associations formed at time of learning are
    typically the most effective retrieval cues
  • State-dependent memory is our tendency to
    remember something better if your physical
    condition is same at time of recall as it was at
    the time of learning

20
The Influence of Emotional Arousal
  • greater the emotional arousal associated with an
    event, greater the likelihood that event will be
    remembered.
  • Although event itself may be remembered, the
    emotion associated with event does not guarantee
    accurate memory for details of event

21
The Influence of Emotional Arousal
  • During stressful or emotional events, SNS works
    to boost production of cortisol and epinephrine
  • This is usually accompanied by increased
    stimulation of the amygdala
  • Net effect of these processes is to enhance
    memory storage of information associated with
    emotional or stressful events

22
Interference
  • Role of interference
  • Part of the difficulty for Ebbinghaus may have
    been the fact that he memorized so many lists of
    nonsense syllables
  • If one learns several sets of related materials,
    retention of old material makes it harder to
    retain new material, and learning of new
    materials makes it harder to retain the old

23
Reconstructing Past Events
  • When you try to remember an event, you usually
    start with details you remember clearly, and fill
    in the gaps.
  • This is the process of reconstruction.
  • When we try to retrieve the memory, we
    reconstruct an account based partly on surviving
    memories and partly on expectations of what must
    have happened.

24
Reconstructing Past Events
  • Your memory for activities that are routine
    your breakfast, lunch or dinner for example
    from the past week can be reconstructed with
    little effort. But these will fade rapidly
    unless something unusual happened.

25
Reconstructing Past Events
  • Hindsight bias
  • tendency to mold our recollection of the past to
    how events later turned out
  • We say I knew that was going to happen! after
    the event has occurred.
  • Our memories are tailored as we reconstruct the
    event to fit that outcome.

26
Reconstructing Past Events
  • The false or recovered memory controversy
  • Reports of long-lost memories, prompted by
    clinical techniques, are known as recovered
    memories. Often these are memories of abuse that
    took place in early childhood.
  • examples of accurate inaccurate memories
    constructed through clinical techniques

27
Reconstructing Past Events
  • Memory for traumatic events
  • Sigmund Freud believed that it was possible to
    repress a painful memory, motivation or emotion,
    to move it from the conscious to the unconscious
    mind.
  • This idea is not well supported in research on
    memory and forgetting.

28
Reconstructing Past Events
  • Memory for traumatic events
  • Research indicates that it is possible to forget
    a traumatic event, but whether this happens
    depends on several age at the time of the
    event, reaction of family, and type of event
  • Most people do not forget traumatic events if
    they happen later than age 3.

29
Reconstructing Past Events
  • Suggestion and false memory
  • A false memory is a report that one believes to
    be a memory but actually never occurred.
  • studies have shown it is possible to implant
    memories for fictional events by suggestion
  • 1/4 of subjects in studies were convinced that
    they had been lost as children after a researcher
    suggested it to them.

30
Reconstructing Past Events
  • Children as eyewitnesses
  • Under proper conditions, children as young as
    three can make accurate reports of events that
    they have witnessed.
  • Young children can answer specific questions
    accurately.

31
Reconstructing Past Events
  • Children as eyewitnesses
  • Repetition of question in the same interview
    session may yield two different answers.
  • Repetition of the question between spaced
    interview sessions may help child remember
    better, which is important in court testimony
  • Dolls and props seem like helpful tools, but they
    do not increase the accuracy of a childs recall
    or testimony.

32
Reconstructing Past Events
  • Children as eyewitnesses
  • Most effective strategies in interviewing young
    children are
  • Use of simple questions
  • Maintenance of a non-threatening atmosphere
    during the interview
  • Avoidance of suggestions or pressure
  • Schedule the interview as soon as is reasonable
    after the event

33
Amnesia After Brain Damage
  • Amnesia is a severe loss or deterioration of
    memory.
  • We can learn a lot about the different forms of
    memory by studying these cases.

34
Figure 7.19a
  • Figure 7.19 (a) The hippocampus is a large
    subcortical structure of the brain

35
Figure 7.20
  • Figure 7.20 Brain damage induces retrograde
    amnesia (loss of old memories) and anterograde
    amnesia (difficulty storing new memories.)

36
Amnesia After Brain Damage
  • Frontal-lobe damage
  • Frontal lobes receive substantial input from
    hippocampus. Damage here causes some problems
    that are similar to hippocampal damage, and some
    unique problems as well
  • occurs as a result of stroke, head trauma, or
    Korsakoffs syndrome, a dementia brought on by
    deficiency of vitamin B1 related to chronic
    alcoholism.

37
Amnesia After Brain Damage
  • Frontal-lobe damage
  • symptoms of Korsakoffs syndrome include
  • Apathy and confusion
  • Retrograde amnesia usually dating back to about
    15 years before the onset of the syndrome
  • Anterograde amnesia
  • Confabulation wild guessing mixed in with
    correct information in an effort to hide memory
    gaps

38
Amnesia After Brain Damage
  • Implicit memory in amnesiac patients
  • Implicit memory does not require recognition.
    The recall of activities stored in implicit
    memory seems effortless and unconscious.
  • You drive your car to school everyday but dont
    remember any details of the activities associated
    with driving.
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