1 / 17

Remembering and Forgetting Information

Remembering and Forgetting Information. Chapter 3. Remembering. Using a Schema. Importance of Organization. Organized, coherent, structured “map” of our world Something doesn’t match we have to stop and overcome confusion Must be able to block out incorrect information Giving directions

armand
Télécharger la présentation

Remembering and Forgetting Information

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Remembering and Forgetting Information Chapter 3

  2. Remembering

  3. Using a Schema

  4. Importance of Organization • Organized, coherent, structured “map” of our world • Something doesn’t match we have to stop and overcome confusion • Must be able to block out incorrect information • Giving directions • New information must be stored correctly • Misplacing items

  5. Recognition • Say with great accuracy when something is familiar • Much more stored in memory that we might think • Singles items may be indexed under several headings • Can recognize a piano regardless of the song • Can recognize songs regardless of the instrument • More categories assigned, easier retrieval

  6. Recall • Active reconstruction of information • Every word you use • Knowledge, attitudes, and expectations • Can simplify, distort, or enrich • Confabulation • False memories • Fill in gaps of incomplete memories

  7. Confabulation • Clip from Harry Potter

  8. Relearning • Implicit memory • Long-term memory has general concepts • Specific details are forgotten • Need to use knowledge learned years ago • Fewer tries/shorter time than someone learning for the first time = benefiting

  9. Photographic Memory • Eidetic Memory • Rarely seen in adults • Children can recall very specific details from a picture, page, or scene briefly viewed • Does not truly exist as we imagine • Merely an increased capacity of iconic memory

  10. Eyewitness Reports

  11. Forgetting

  12. Forgetting • Does not mean memory is lost • Inability to bring it back • Forgetting occurs rapidly • Overlearning: rehearse it continually • Not enough practice • Memory decay

  13. Interference Theory • Conflict between new and old material • Adjusting schemas causes problems • New material similar to old hard to remember • Proactive: earlier memory does the blocking • Retroactive: later memory does the blocking • EX: New phone number

  14. Repression • Old data not always lost, but blocked • Blocked not always accident(Freud) • Embarrassing of frightening experiences • Useful applications • Parking your car

  15. Amnesia • Blocking of old memories, loss of newer ones • Explanations • Temporary reduction of blood supply from an injury • Blow to the head causes major electrical changes, wiping out new memories • Another blow to the head will not undo amnesia

  16. Amnesia Cont. • Retrograde Amnesia • Loss of past memories • Memories closer to accident more likely to be forgotten • Anterograde Amnesia • Inability to create new memories • Long-term memories remain intact • “Short term memory loss”

  17. Amnesia Examples Retrograde Anterograde Dory clip • Sponge Bob clip

More Related