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Memory

Memory. Memory. = any indication that learning has persisted over time We do not know exactly how memory happens Use models to help us understand Three Box (Information Processing) Model Levels of Processing Model Neither model is perfect! . Models (review).

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Memory

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  1. Memory

  2. Memory • = any indication that learning has persisted over time • We do not know exactly how memory happens • Use models to help us understand • Three Box (Information Processing) Model • Levels of Processing Model • Neither model is perfect!

  3. Models (review) Information Processing Model: • 3 stages information must pass through to become a memory • Sensory Memory • Split-second in time, not much passes through • Short-Term Memory • Information we are working on • Long-Term Memory • Declarative (semantic, episodic) • Non-Declarative (procedural)

  4. Short-Term vs Long-Term Memory

  5. Mnemonics • How many items can you memorize? • How can we explain the increased ability to remember? • Discuss

  6. Mnemonics • By creating more associations between the information we are attempting to recall, and the information already stored, we increase the likelihood that something will cue that memory • Link the new information to existing schemas

  7. Forgetting • Remember: the capacity of the long-term memory is unlimited • However, we often have difficulty remembering information we need • Result of failure at one or more of the following stages: • Encoding • Storage • Retrieval

  8. Forgetting: Encoding Failure • Information does not enter into our memory properly • We are simply unable to encode all of the information our senses are bombarded with • Somewhat dependent on age • As we get older, the areas of the brain that active during encoding become less responsive

  9. Forgetting: Storage Decay • Much of what we learn we quickly forget, but this levels off in time • Example: the ability to remember Spanish • Compared those who learned it recently, and those who had studies Spanish 50 years earlier • Those who learned recently (<3 years ago) remembered much more then the others • Those who studied 50 years ago forgot most of what they knew, but anything remembered after 3 years was remembered for life

  10. Storage Decay • graph

  11. Forgetting: Retrieval • Even if a memory is encoded, stored, and available, it may be inaccessible to us. • “on the tip of my tongue” • Often, a simple cue is all that is needed to remember something • Example: It starts with the letter ‘M’

  12. Forgetting: Retrieval Interference: • Learning some information may get in the way of retrieving other information • Example: the first week of school • when one friend gives you a phone number you can easily recall it. • As you make more friends, it becomes difficult to recall everyone's individual phone number

  13. Forgetting: Retrieval Motivated Forgetting • We sometimes unconsciously revise our memories in order to protect or enhance our self-concept • Example: all of the cookies from the jar were eaten, but each family member reported taking fewer then they actually ate • Freud’s repression: we censor painful information in order to decrease the anxiety we feel • BUT the memory still exists, and can be retrieved by cues later (free association)

  14. Activity • Read over the assigned pages from the section of the textbook on Memory Construction • Design and perform a short 2 minute skit that embodies the main ideas in your reading • Will be assessed!

  15. Levels of Processing Model Craik and Lockhart (‘72) • Rejects the information processing/3-box model = Memory is a function of the depth to which we process information • Memory recall falls on a continuum from shallow to deep • Which will be easier to recall: information we process shallowly or deeply at the time of encoding?

  16. Levels of Processing • Shallow processing • Fragile memory • Susceptible to decay • Examples: • Processing the letters contained in a word • Processing the shape of something • Processing how something sounds

  17. Levels of Processing • Deep Processing • Durable memory • More likely to last • Examples: • Processing the relationships between information • Processing the meaning of something • Processing the importance of something

  18. Levels of Processing • How did Craik and Lockhart arrive at this theory? Incidental Learning Paradigm: • Investigated learning without intent • i.e. learning by accident • Present different groups of participants with the same list of items • Each group performs a different task related to the words • Count the number of letters (shallow) • Form an image of each word, and rate the vividness (deep) • NOT told there will be a memory test • Later asked to recall as many words as possible

  19. Levels of Processing • Which condition resulted in greater recall? • Deep processing (form image)

  20. Comparing Models • Consider the memory activity we completed at the beginning of class. • How would you explain the improvement in memory according to the principles of each model?

  21. Comparing Models • What are the main differences between the two models we have looked at? • Information Processing vs Levels of Processing

  22. Comparing Models Information Processing • Focused on the storage of memories • Structured into distinct stages • Distinguishes between STM and LTM • Rehearsal of any kind will improve memory Levels of Processing • Focused on the process of creating memories • A continuum • Does NOT distinguish between STM and LTM • Only deep/elaborate rehearsal will improve memory

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