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General Psychology

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Title: General Psychology


1
General Psychology
  • Chapter 6
  • Memory

2
Memory
  • Put into Maintain
    Recovery
  • Memory in Memory from Memory

ENCODING
STORAGE
RETRIEVAL
3
Sensory Memory
  • Iconic
  • Sensory store associated with vision
  • Echoic
  • Sensory store associated with hearing

4
Short-Term Memory
  • STM Level or store in human memory with limited
    capacity and, without benefit of rehearsal, of
    brief duration (about 15-20 sec)
  • Information from sensory memory or from long-term
    memory can be moved into STM, where we can work
    with it, (also called Working Memory)

5
Duration of STM
  • Rehearsal is repeating information over and over
  • Maintenance rehearsal in STM is the simple
    repetition of information already in STM

6
Capacity of STM
  • Capacity of 7, ( or 2), chunks of information

7
Long-Term Memory (LTM)
  • Memory for large amounts of information that is
    held for long periods of time
  • Not known how long information remains stored in
    LTS

8
Long-Term Memory (LTM)
  • Elaborative rehearsal in LTM refers to thinking
    about, organizing, and forming images or
    information to make it meaningful, or relating it
    to something already in LTS

9
Types of Long-Term Memory
  • Declarative memory includes semantic and episodic
    from which information can be intentionally
    recalled
  • Vocabulary, concepts, language rules, and facts
    are stored in SEMANTIC memory.
  • In episodic memory, life events and personal
    experiences are stored (time-related experiences
    are stored in chronological order).

10
Types of Long-Term Memory
  • Nondeclarative or procedural memory involves the
    acquisition of, retention and retrieval of,
    performance skills, like a tennis stroke or a
    golf swing

11
Figure 6.1 A simplified model of human memory.
12
Accuracy of LTM
  • According to Bartlett, people tend to form
    features of what is experienced
  • Reconstructive memory features are retrieved
    and reconstructed to form a report of what was
    encoded and stored
  • Sometimes, reconstruction process results in
    inaccurate reports of what is in memory

13
Accuracy of LTM
  • Repressed memory so disturbing that a person
    has pushed it into the unconscious where it is no
    longer readily available for retrieval
  • Compromise memory blending of conflicting
    information in memory so that an averaged
    version of information will be recalled.

14
Table 6.1 Statements and observations about
eyewitness testimony on which experts in the
field agree (from Kassin, et al., 2001).
15
Does Gender Affect Memory?
  • No gender differences in semantic memory or
    memory associated with general intelligence
  • Significant differences in encoding and retrieval
    for episodic and/or autobiographical memory
  • At both encoding and retrieval, the amygdala of
    women shows more activity for episodic memories

16
How are Memories Formed?
  • Most human memories are stored in the cerebral
    cortex
  • The hippocampus seems most necessary for memory
    formation

17
Amnesia
  • Retrograde amnesia loss of memory for events
    that occurred before the onset of amnesia
  • Anterograde amnesia loss of memory for events
    that occur after the onset of amnesia

18
When and How are Memories Formed in the Brain?
  • Changes at synapse
  • With experience, flow of impulses becomes easier.
  • Neurotransmitter, glutamate, causes ion balance
    so that neuron is more easily stimulated.
  • Research claims that changes in postsynaptic
    neuron matters.

19
How We Measure Retrieval
  • Recall person is asked to produce information
    to which he or she has been previously exposed
  • Free recall
  • Serial recall
  • Cued recall

20
Recognition
  • Person asked to identify previously experienced
    material
  • Person must first RETRIEVE information stored in
    memory
  • Person must then match the memory with material
    to be recognized and decide whether the material
    was seen before

21
Figure 6.2 Differences in retrieval scores for
the memory of nonsense syllables over a two-day
period.
22
Indirect Measures of Memory
  • Relearning change in performance that occurs
    when one is required to learn material for a
    second time
  • Almost always requires fewer trials than the
    original learning
  • Procedural memory

23
How We Encode Information
  • Encoding specificity principle how we retrieve
    information depends on how it was encoded in the
    first place
  • State-dependent memory retrieval depends on the
    extent to which a persons state of mind at
    retrieval matches the persons state of mind at
    encoding

24
Flashbulb Memory
  • Memories that are unusually clear and vivid

25
The Usefulness of Meaningfulness
  • Meaningfulness extent to which new information
    evokes associations with information already in
    the LTM
  • Meaningfulness resides in the learner, not in the
    material to be learned

26
Figure 6.3 Fifteen drawings of the head of a
penny.
27
Mnemonic Devices
  • Narrative chaining unorganized material is
    woven into a meaningful story
  • Key-word method using imagery during encoding
    to aid retrieval
  • Method of loci taking a well-known place and
    visually placing material to be recalled in
    various places

28
Figure 6.4 Percent correct recall for words from
12 lists learned under two study conditions.
29
Figure 6.5 An illustration of how the key word
method can be used to help foreign language
retrieval.
30
Schemas
  • Schema organized mental representation of the
    world that is adaptive and formed by experience
  • Person scheme helps us organize information
    about the characteristics of people
  • Role scheme information and expectations about
    how people in certain roles should behave
  • Event scheme ideas about how events should occur

31
Scheduling Practice
  • Overlearning practicing or rehearsing material
    over and above what is needed to learn it
  • Massed-practice no break between learning
    trials
  • Distributed-practice rest intervals are
    interspersed among the learning trial

32
Figure 6.6 Idealized data showing the short-term
and long-term advantages of overlearning.
33
Figure 6.7 Improvement in performance as a
function of the distribution of practice time.
34
Interference
  • Retroactive interference occurs when
    interfering activities come after the learning
    that is to be remembered or retrieved
  • Proactive interference occurs when previously
    learned material interferes with the retrieval of
    material learned later

35
Table 6.2 Designs of experiments to demonstrate
retroactive interference and proactive
interference.
36
Figure 6.8 These groups illustrate how activity
following learning can interfere with the
retrieval of the learned behavior or materials.
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