Memory and Cognition Exam 3C Implicit and Explicit Memory
Experimental dissociation examples
Time, read vs. generated answers
Examples of procedural memory of people with anterograde amnesia
Tower of Hanoi and mirror tracing
Transfer appropriate processing
memory performance depends on the match between processes engaged at study and processes required by the test; you are able to TRANSFER the PROCESSING used from the study to the test when the test form is APPROPRIATE.
Woman with Korsakoff syndrome
met her doctor who pricked her hand when he shook it; she later met him again and while she couldn't remember meeting him before she refused to shake his hand; she had learned but there was no conscious memory of that learning; explicit memory is failing while implicit memory is working
Anterograde amnesia
occurs when people cannot form new LTM; STM is intact and so is LTM that was formed prior to the trauma
Time study
participants incidentally learned 96 words. First tested immediately on 48 of the words using either an explicit (recognition) test or implicit (word fragment completion) test. Then tested one week later on the other 48 words using an explicit and implicit test. Results: performance on the explicit (recognition) test declined over time, but performance on the implicit (word completion) test stayed the same
Picture naming study
participants ranging in age from 20s to 70s had to name b&w line drawings as quickly as possible. An explicit test (simple recognition) showed better performance for the younger age, while and implicit test (repetition priming then recognition - how much faster second time around) showed equal performance across ages; *could improve implicitly
Priming study using subjects with amnesia
people are given a list of words to read and learn incidentally
How does AA affect implicit and explicit memory
perform better on implicit memory tasks since they cannot consciously retrieve new info from LTM (explicit memory)
Implicit memory
recollection of information without awareness; indirect test of memory (you aren't necessarily being tested or you don't know you're being tested)
Perceptual priming
related to the form of the stimulus more than the meaning (visual or auditory form)
Conceptually driven processes
rely on meaning, prompted by word generation or semantic priming, tested by recall (tied to meaning)
Perceptual identification
requires you to read a word presented barely above the threshold of perception so it's very hard to see
Examples of implicit memory in every day life
subliminal scents and instructions while under anesthesia
Experimental dissociations
when variables of experiments affect implicit and explicit memory differently
Explicit test results
(recall or recognition test) control subjects remember more; amnesia patients don't remember being given a list of words
Implicit test results
(word stem completion or word fragment completion) amnesia patients performed better here than on the explicit test... but they didn't know why
Two types of retrieval
Explicit and implicit memory
Results of transfer appropriate processing study
-On both conceptual tests, the participants who had studied using generation (conceptual) performed better -On both perceptual tests, the participants who had studies using reading (perceptual) performed better
Four test conditions on the big transfer appropriate processing study
Conceptual/explicit = free recall Conceptual/implicit = general knowledge Perceptual/explicit = graphemic cue ("bushel") Perceptual/implicit = word stem completion (bas___)
You would perform better on a recall test with what kind of studying?
Generating (conceptual)
Recall the 2 types of encoding
Intentional and incidental
How does reading vs. generating affect explicit vs. implicit memory?
On explicit tests (recall) generating tends to produce better results On implicit tests (perceptual identification) reading tends to produce better results
Overall takeaway about AA
Patients use more implicit memory than explicit. They improve on procedural tasks like the tower of hanoi and mirror tracing, but they do not remember practicing them
Two study conditions on the big transfer appropriate processing study
Read (perceptual) = shy-bashful Generate (conceptual) = shy-b____
Example of read vs. generate
Read: hot-cold Generate: hot-c___
You would perform better on a perceptual identification test with what kind of studying?
Reading (perceptual)
You would perform better on a word fragmentation test with what kind of studying?
Reading (perceptual)
Mirror tracing
a block-stacking puzzle; H.M. was given this test; while he believed he had never seen it, his procedural memory showed through his behavior as he improved each time (implicit prevailing over explicit again)
Tower of hanoi
a block-stacking puzzle; H.M. was given this test; while he believed he had never seen it, his procedural memory showed through his behavior as he improved each time (implicit prevailing over explicit again)
Population dissociations
a dissociation (difference) between two populations that occurs any time a variable affects implicit and explicit memory differently
Population dissociation examples
amnesia and age
Explicit memory
conscious recollection of information; direct test of memory (you know you're being tested)
Perceptually driven processes
data driven/sounds like/looks like, prompted by reading, tested by perceptual identification or word fragment completion
How does age affect explicit vs implicit memory
explicit memory starts to fail over time while implicit does not
How does time affect explicit vs. implicit memory
explicit memory tends to decrease more than implicit memory over time
H.M.
had hippocampus removed to stop epileptic seizures, which resulted in anterograde amnesia; performed well on implicit memory tests but poorly on explicit memory tests (Tower of Hanoi and mirror tracing tasks)