Chpt. 7 Memory
3 Ways to Acquire Memory
1. Encoding 2. Storage 3. Retrieval
3 Ways to Forget
1. Interference 2. Blocking 3. Absentmindedness
Organization of Long-Term Memory
1. Meaning (chunking/schemas) 2. Association Networks
(STORAGE) 3 Types
1.Sensory Storage 2.Short-term Storage 3. Long-term Storage Atkinson, Shiffrin 1968. Each storage retains different encoded input. Certain amount of info for a certain length of time.
Henry Molaison
1926-2008. Medial temporal lobes, area in middle of temporal lobes, hippocampus, removed for epileptic surgery. Lost ability to store info in long-term storage. ANTEROGRADE AMNESIA. But could learn Procedural Memory but didn't remember learning/doing it, but could acquire skills.
Filter Theory
1958. Donald Broadbent. How we selectively attend to most important info. Ex: emotion stimuli, faces.
Retrograde Amnesia
A condition in which people lose the ability to access memories they had before a brain injury. NO OLD MEMORIES. NO Explicit: Episodic/Semantic. Lose memories of past events, personal info, facts, people.
Anterograde Amnesia
A condition in which people lose the ability to form new memories after experiencing a brain injury. NO NEW MEMORIES. No way to encode short-term memory into long-term memory
3. Long-term Storage
A memory storage system that allows relatively permanent storage, probably of an unlimited amount of information. Stores information for re-access and use at later time. Primarily SEMANTIC, also visual, auditory. Dual coding provides richest encoding. Duration: unlimited. Capacity: unlimited. (How'd info get from short-term to long-term?)Levels of processing: maintenance rehearsal, elaborative rehearsal. (How's info organized?) meaning (chunking/schemas) and Association Networks.
2. Short-Term Storage
A memory storage system that briefly holds a limited amount of information in awareness. (Sensory storage when attention/focus and working memory transfers info to short-term storage.) Maintains info for immediate use, primarily AUDITORY, visual, semantic. Duration: 20 SECONDS. But INDEFINITE with working memory manipulation. Capacity: 7-8 items + or - 2. This is called MEMORY SPAN. Using working memory aids capacity. CHUNKING increases capacity. REPETITION extends duration. Holding place but with working memory--longer. Active processing in working memory increases both this capacity and this duration.
1. Sensory Storage
A memory storage system that very briefly holds a vast amount of information from the 5 senses in close to their original sensory formats. Creates perceptual continuity for the world around us. Encoded in the sense it is experienced: visual, auditory, taste, smell, touch. Duration: few seconds. Capacity: VAST. Huge amounts of sensory input. Maintain info very briefly. 5 types: vision, hearing, taste, smell, touch. Sensory input transduced into a neural signal processed in brain.
Mnemonics
Aid Retrieval. Learning aids or strategies that use retrieval cues to improve access to memory. Method of Loci: Associate items you want to remember with walking thru physical location and putting them in different places.
Working Memory
An active processing system that allows manipulation of different types of information to keep it available for current use. Works on info in short-term memory, manipulates info and can move it to lont-term memory. Chunking to increase capacity of memory span. Repetition to extend duration.
Change Blindness
An individual's failure to notice large visual changes in the environment. Selective attention filters out irrelevant info and causes people NOT to notice large changes in the environment. Experiment--switch people asking directions.
Retrieval Cue
Anything that helps a person access information in long-term storage. Sticky note, apps. Encountering stimuli can automatically trigger memories. Context, State, mnemonics
Primacy Effect
Better memory of items at beginning of list. Due to retrieving from long-term memory.
Recency Effect
Better memory of most recent items at end of list. Due to retrieving from short-term memory.
Flashbulb Memories
Brown/Kulik 1977 Vivid memories seem like a flash photo. Circumstances in which we first learned of even. Ex: who with, where we were, how we found out, details, etc. Example of EPISODIC memory. NOT problem of persistence. NOT recurring unwanted memory. Generally more confident about flashbulb memory than ordinary memory. Not perfectly accurate. Strong emotional response.
Memory Bias
Changing of memories over time so that they become consistent with our current beliefs or attitudes. Revise, remember successes more, more positive, etc.
Dual Coding
Combination of both visual and semantic encoding. Very successful method of transferring info into long-term storage. Ex: repeating phone number and making last 4 digits mean word.
Association Networks
Concepts are connected through their associations. The closer the concepts are, the stronger their associations. Collins/Loftus. 1975. Item's distinctive features linked in way that identifies item. Each unit of info in a network is a NODE. Each node connected to other nodes. Organized by category. Activating one node increases the likelihood closely associated nodes in same category activated.
Explicit Memories
Declarative Memory. Type of memory we can intentionally retrieve and describe. System for long-term storage of conscious memories that can be verbally described. Requires conscious effort and often can be verbally described. 1. Semantic 2. Episodic
Semantic Memory
EXPLICIT (can talk about it) Knowledge of facts independent of personal experience. Facts and knowledge.
Episodic Memory
EXPLICIT (can talk about it) Personal experiences. Info about time and place each experience occurred. Personally experienced events.
Repetition
Extends duration of short-term storage. Ex: repeating phone #. Remember as long as pay attention.
(ENCODING) Attention
Focusing mental resources on information; allows further processing for perception, memory, response. Limited--don't divide between too many tasks. Visual or auditory info. Focus on one feature for faster, only listen to one thing. Most unattended auditory info is not processed but some can filter in. Important info is personally relevant, loud, different. Selective attention allows us to filter unwanted info. Focus on what is important.
Memory Processed by several Regions of our Brain
Hippocampus: Within temporal lobe. Spatial meaning. New neural connections so experiences become lasting memories. Used in Consolidation of Memories Temporal Lobe: Explicit Memories. Medial temporal: ability to encode short to long-term memory and expand NEW explicit memories? Pre-Frontal cortex: working memory (focus/attention/encoding, manipulating info) amygdala: IMPLICIT memory. Fear learning. Cerebellum: IMPLICIT memory. Procedural Memory.
Schemas
How to chunk. Meaningful way to chunk up items. How to group items for long-term storage. Helps us to perceive, organize, process, use info. Guide us to relevant features. Interpret meaning based on our experiences. Can lead to bias, fit into our existing cultural schemas. Having a schema about info can help you remember it later on. Ex: laundry description.
Distortion
Human memory is not a perfectly accurate representation of the past, but is flawed. 5 ways Memory Bias Flashbulb Memories Misattribution Suggestibility False Memories
Procedural Memory
IMPLICIT (unconscious) A type of implicit memory that involves motor skills and behavioral habits. Employed to achieve goals. Coordinating muscle movements. Ex: following rules of road when driving, riding bike. Find consciously thinking about automatic behaviors interferes with smooth production of those behaviors. Tend to last long time.
Classical Conditioning
IMPLICIT (unconscious) Associating 2 stimuli elicits a response. Does NOT require conscious attention. Happens automatically without deliberate effort.
3.Absentmindedness
Inattentive or shallow encoding of events. Failing to pay attention is major cause. When prospective memory fails (future planning) because caught up in another activity. tip: go back to room where you forgot to get context dependent retrieval cue effect.
Chunking
Increases capacity in short-term storage. Using working memory to organize information into meaningful units to make it easier to remember. 1. Reduce # items by putting in units, so memory span increases. 2. Units are meaningful and easier to remember. More efficient at chunking with greater expertise with material.
Spreading Activation Models
Information that is heard or seen activates specific nodes for memories in long-term storage. Increases ease of access of stores info to linked info. EASIER RETRIEVAL. (Folders within folders)
Memory Systems (Types of Memory in Long-Term Storage) Figure p. 249
Long-Term Storage. EXPLICIT (Episodic and Semantic Memory) IMPLICIT (Classical conditioning, Procedural Memory) Long-term storage of memory has several memory systems located in different parts of brain.
Amnesia
Lost ability to store info in long-term storage. Can't retain and use info.
Memory Span
Miller 1956. Capacity of short-term memory about 7-8 items + or - 2. Maybe even just 4 items. Increases as children develop. Decreases as adults age.
Suggestibility
Misleading info, leading questions, affects memory. Loftus 1970s studies: red stop sign and yield sign. word "smashed" , people remembered broken glass in photo. Eyewitness accounts, change blindness. Eyewitness only good if paying attention WHEN event happens.
False Memories
Misled into recalling recognizing events that did not happen. Basic procedure: associate categories as something though not specifically listed. Experiment:remember when you were lost at mall. When a person imagines event happening they form mental image. Confuse mental image with real memory. Can't figure out source of image.
Misattribution
Misremember time, place, person, circumstance involved with memory. Source Amnesia=Memory for event but can't recall where we got info. Ex: Before 3, no memories, because no language Cryptomnesia=we come up with new idea but only retrieved idea from memory and failed to attribute the idea to its proper source. Ex: taking notes verbatim and not documenting source.
State
Mood. Internal cues. State-Dependent Memory Effect: Retrieval cue is when in same mood/state as when first learned.
1. Interference
Most forgetting occurs because other info (not because info is unused). 1.Retroactive Interference 2.Proactive Interference
Consolidation of Memories
New neural connections in hippocampus. A process by which immediate memories become lasting through long-term storage encoding. New synapses constructed. Your experiences become lasting memories. Medial temporal lobes/hippocampus like Google, coordinates storage of info between sites. Memories stored in cortex of sense they were taken in. So visual memories in visual cortex. Sound in auditory cortex. Regions active in perception are same regions used in remembering. Remembering almost like re-experiencing. Sleep helps with Consolidation.
Proactive Interference
Newer memories are hard to access due to interference from older info. CANT GET NEWER because too many older.
Implicit Memories
Non-declarative Memory. Not conscious of. The system for long-term storage of unconscious memories that cannot be verbally described. Does NOT require conscious effort and often cannot be verbally described. 1. Classical Conditioning 2. Procedural Memory
Retroactive Interference
Older memories are hard to access due to interference from newer info. Access to older memories impaired by newer memories. CANT GET OLDER.
Reconsolidation of Memories
Once memories activated, they need to be consolidated again for long-term storage. Reconsolidated memories may differ from original versions. When painful memories recalled in less threatening way, the memories themselves can become less threatening. Associated with less negative emotions. Classical conditioning technique:extinction. During period when memories susceptible to reconsolidation. Memories can be altered through reconsolidation.
Context
Physical location, odors, background music, etc. Context Dependent Memory Effect: remember better in same place where learned it at.
Encoding
Processing of information so that it can be stored. changing info into a neural code the brain can use. Memories created by encoding information from sensory input. Ex: reading/looking words/books. Attention, focusing, visual attention, auditory attention, selective attention, filter theory, change blindness.
Prospective Memory
Remembering to do something at some future time. Future oriented. Costs: cognitive effort, unable to attend closely to other info. Takes up cognitive resources. Cues can help us remember: sticky notes, app, etc. Costs in terms of reducing attentional resources and impairing short-term storage and working memory processing.
3 Part Memory Storage System Figure 7.6
Sensory storage goes to short-term storage by paying attention/focus, encoding. Info in short-term is manipulated in working memory by repeating and chunking. (Info not manipulated is lost). Short-term to long-term by encoding using maintenance rehearsal and elaborative rehearsal.
2. Blocking
Temporarily unable to remember something. Tip of the tongue Phenomenon--trying to recall specific words.
Retrieval
The act of recalling/remembering stored information when it is needed. Re-accessing the info for use. Allows accessing of previously encoded and stored info. Ex: remember for exam. Long-term storage, explicit (episodic, semantic) implicit (classical conditioning, procedural memory), consolidation of memories, reconsolidation, retrograde amnesia, anterograde amnesia.
Persistence
The continual recurrence of unwanted memories from long-term storage. Unwanted memories recur. PTSD=posttraumatic stress disorder. Some drugs, propanolol block norepinephrine receptors. Given right after event. Also extinction can be used during reconsolidation.
Forgetting
The inability to access a memory from long-term storage. Ebbinghaus 19th cent. Nonsense syllables. More time spent learning=less forgetting. Forgetting aids survival.
Memory
The nervous system's capacity to acquire and retain skills and knowledge for later retrieval. Multiple memory systems.
Storage
The retention of encoded representations over time. Maintaining info for some time. Ex: taking notes. Sensory storage (vision, hearing,taste,smell,touch), short-term storage (working memory, chunking), long-term storage (maintenance rehearsal, elaborative rehearsal, dual coding, meaning, chunking, schemas, association networks, spreading activation models). Duration, capacity, primacy effect, recency effect.
Maintenance Rehearsal
Using working memory processes to repeat information based on how it sounds/AUDITORY. Provides only shallow encoding of information and less successful long-term storage. Ex: repeating.
Elaborative Rehearsal
Using working memory processes to think about how new information relates to ourselves or our prior knowledge (SEMANTIC info). Provides deeper encoding of information for more successful long-term storage. Based on 1. Meaning--link knowledge to already stored. 2. Association Networks Activates more brain regions that shallow/maintenance rehearsal.